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From Vox, here is a collection of twenty-five maps and infographics showing the history, evolution and diffusion of English. Continue reading
07 Saturday Mar 2015
Posted in Lostintranslation
Tags
From Vox, here is a collection of twenty-five maps and infographics showing the history, evolution and diffusion of English. Continue reading
05 Thursday Mar 2015
Posted in Stories
There is this very sweet elderly lady I’ve known all my life. She’s past eighty, unmarried, very busy with gardening, embroidery and good deeds. And she is a voracious reader – with a taste, it turns out, for crime stories, mysteries and thrillers. Oh, and police procedurals on the telly. The gorier they are, the better Miss M. likes them. Continue reading
04 Wednesday Mar 2015
Posted in Stories
Did you know it is World Read Aloud Day?A whole day, all over the world, devoted to this age-old, all-important way to share written words, stories and ideas.
Have a look at the dedicated LitWorld website, enjoy clips of Kipling’s The Smugglers’ Song and Lear’s The Owl and the Pussycat read aloud, and maybe, before the day is over, find someone to read something to.
03 Tuesday Mar 2015
Posted in Stories
Vitagraph was perhaps the most famous amongst the Nickelodeon Era studios, specializing in historical scenes and literary adaptations. Back in the time of one- or two-reel movies, these pioneers adapted for the screen a good deal of Shakespeare and classic novels – the challenge being to tell a complete story in ten or twenty minutes. Continue reading
28 Saturday Feb 2015
Posted in History
A Writer of History is author M.K. Tod’s blog, devoted to the reading, writing and researching of historical fiction.
Amongst other things, M.K. takes well-thought surveys to investigate the inner workings of the genre. It is, in many ways, an illuminating reading. Continue reading
26 Thursday Feb 2015
Posted in Books
You can blame this one on Davide Mana, and his Salgari post over at Karavansara, for reminding me of how I too was subjected to Salgari as a child: in Italy there used to be this curious notion that no childhood could be considered complete without a hefty dose of Malay Pirates and Multi-coloured Corsairs. That went especially for boys, but girls weren’t always allowed to go immune…
I, for one, wasn’t. One summer day, when I was about ten, a distant cousin of my mother’s descended on me with a whole box of vintage Salgari – his own childhood reading choice, some fifteen or twenty hardbacks, with tiger-coloured* covers. He had loved them, he said, and I was going to love them too. Continue reading
24 Tuesday Feb 2015
Posted in Theatre
These two are Vasili Kachalov and Olga Knipper as Hamlet and Gertrude in Edward Gordon Craig and Constantin Stanislavskij’s 1911 production of Hamlet.
Great photo, isn’t it? It’s just one of many treasures to be found Continue reading
21 Saturday Feb 2015
Posted in History
This is an excellent website, created and maintained by people of the University of Victoria, Canada.
The Map of Early Modern London, is quite what it say on the tin: a huge, digital version of the 1560 Agas Map that you can zoom, search, navigate… Continue reading
19 Thursday Feb 2015
Posted in History, Scribbling
Bishopsgate.
Bishopsgate, damn it – not Holborn. Bishopsgate.
I seem to suffer from a curious affliction that makes me read “Bishopsgate” and understand “Holborn.” Repeatedly. For weeks – and, what’s worse, for chapters. Continue reading
17 Tuesday Feb 2015
Posted in Eccentricities