Monday, 30 July 2007

The Tenderness of Wolves

It's good to challenge one's prejudices occasionally. The blurb for "The Tenderness of Wolves", by Stef Penney, begins "1867, Canada", and I would normally read no further - old plus cold doesn't sound, to me, like a winning combination. But my friend M. passed on this beautifully written novel - which won the 2006 Costa book award - and I enjoyed it very much even though it did indeed make me shiver. I also think it's one of the few books I have enjoyed that is written in the present tense. A couple of extracts:
"She considers herself a well-travelled woman, and from each place she has been to, she has brought back a prejudice as a souvenir."
"Trying to make sense of it is like trying to gather the river in his arms."

Now I learn from
here that the author is a Scot and has never been to Canada, in fact she used to suffer from severe agoraphobia. How amazing that a writer can travel so vividly in her imagination, and take the reader along with her. Although, as one of the reviewers wrote, she also hadn't been to 1867, and as someone else said, the past is another country (L.P. Hartley, in "The Go-Between", which begins ""The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.").

Loo with a view

The Antwerp Photo Museum is currently showing the winning Belgian photos from the Nikon Press Photo Awards. This wonderful one of a "Dame Pipi" (lavatory attendant) and a customer is by "promising young photographer" Jimmy Kets, and was taken at the Antwerp Erotic Festival - whatever that may be.

Sunday, 29 July 2007

I want to be slime



It would be hard to compete with
Khadija Teri's finds in Libya but I found these in a shop that seems to cater mostly to Philipinos/as.











Saturday, 21 July 2007

FĂȘte Nationale





Thursday, 19 July 2007

Summer in the City