Blog

Learning Jeremy Smyth Learning Jeremy Smyth

Witnessing

The Great Fire of London burned for 4 days from Sunday 2nd of September 1666 until Thursday 6th by which point the medieval city had been destroyed though its embers still smouldered. Rain on Sunday 9th finally extinguished the last of the fires and traumatised Londoners were able to assess the damage.

Read More
Learning Jeremy Smyth Learning Jeremy Smyth

Making endings

Gordon lives two doors away from us. He turned eighty a fortnight ago and one of his retirement pastimes is wood-turning. Periodically, he brings us scraps of wood from his workshop to use as kindling for our wood-burner. One of these kindling bags contained the two halves of this beautiful sycamore bowl.

Read More
Reading Jeremy Smyth Reading Jeremy Smyth

Mudlarking

Lara Maiklem (Bloomsbury, 2019)

I read this memoir-history during the hot May of lockdown but it occurs to me that Mudlarking would be a lovely companion for the long, cold evenings of November or February when reading in front of the fire is infinitely preferable to actually sloshing around in the freezing mud of the Thames. 

Read More
Reading Jeremy Smyth Reading Jeremy Smyth

Hamnet

Maggie O’Farrell (Tinder Press, 2020)

I bought Hamnet having looked at a weather forecast that showed large raindrops for each day of the forthcoming week, and double raindrops on several days. I needed a really fine novel to carry me through the impending sogginess.

Read More