Happy New Year, good luck everyone.

Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
To the last syllable of recorded time

Good lord, it’s January.

I swear it was March only last week, and this weekend just gone we were in the middle of a heatwave that had my sister and I sat on the patio up to our knees in gallon buckets of cold water.

Everyone’s probably tired of hearing the soundbite about “may you live in interesting times” being a Greek (Roman?) curse, but I’m going to repeat it anyway. Without a doubt we are living through a year, or at the very least pandemic, that will have it’s own chapter in history books about the early twenty-first century. That said, for me there’s a disconnect between knowing I’m stuck in history and actually feeling like it. So far, touch wood, I’ve been lucky and the virus hasn’t touched my life (and, yes, I know, tempting fate by putting it into writing). My sister has received the first half of the vaccine, and I’ve spent most of the year furloughed, kept at home hopefully out of reach of infection. It’s a bit like how I felt about cancer before 2016; it exists but it doesn’t involve me, until it did.

It’s been a strange year hasn’t it? Some reading this have had life return to something resembling reality, others are ducking and dodging the combined irresponsibility of their governments and gleefully ignorant countrymen. For all the time I had to spend at home working on my own projects I didn’t get much done, and it’s not like I couldn’t bear to do anything I just didn’t have any gumption. Setting deadlines for myself didn’t work either, as I was (am) entirely aware that when there’s nothing to do time has no meaning except which meal you’re preparing. So that’s where I’ve been; I’ve not been ill, I’ve not given up on this blog, I’ve just been ‘here’. Actually I haven’t done a whole lot of anything… except play a lot of Dragon Age: Origins over the November lockdown.

I won’t say good riddance to 2020, and I won’t say anything hopeful about 2021 either – unlike apparently everyone on social media. Since 2016 we’ve looked ahead on December 31st with a “well it can’t get worse!”. And then it did, steadily every year that followed. Just when you thought fate/chance/luck/nature had no moves left to play, something else was thrown at us. For all we know we could be jinxing it and whatever Trickster God is in charge of the universe clearly doesn’t like being challenged. I swear to God it’s like being the neighbours of the idiots who dug up a Jumanji board. Which is why I’ll say good luck. Whether it’s a well needed blessing to survive whatever disaster, or political machinations trample over us, or gentle encouragement to embrace whatever freedom we find coming out the other side.

So no resolutions, no plans, no “202x is going to be my year!”, just a very neutral recognition that 2021 is going to be a year. It is after 2020, it will lead to 2022, and when it’s over we’ll all say “happy new year” again.

Not Dead it Seems

Happy Halloween! Why are you looking at me like that? Ohh right, it was over a month ago. Happy birthday to me- no, wait, that was three weeks ago… it’s the thought that counts though right? RIGHT?

In my defence, I do have a pretty good reason for being away from the keyboard. I got a job, a job at a bookshop!

Stop imaging your fantasy bookshop. My shop is not a cosy seaside secondhand place where staff sit around reading. There is no shop cat sunning itself in the window, and my duties do not include solving the occasional murder. Though I have been sent on a roast chestnut run. I’ve joined my local Waterstones (imo a coveted position indeed).

Well, I say ‘joined’, technically I’m still in my probation period. So there’s entirely the possibility that come December 15th I may find myself back where I was in August except with colder weather. Actually probably not, if I was for the off it would probably wait until January; no sensible person in the world would leave themselves short-staffed over Christmas.

I really enjoy my job and even though it can be tiring and my legs wake up stiff on my days off, it feels well earned. I want to stay and I’m quietly hopeful that I’ll be asked, though I won’t be confident in that belief until my manager confirms it. Both managers would make excellent poker players, and while I’m sure one likes me as a person, I think they still have doubts about me as an employee. The other I know likes me as an employee – or at least how quickly I’ve learned and become confident at handling the tills – but I’m not sure about their opinion of me as a person. The only real certainty I have about that one is that they really like DC comics and graphic novels. I have been given extra hours, and will be getting more over Christmas so I think that’s a good indicator, however, it could just as easily be a sign of how busy the shop is going to get.

And no, I won’t be writing any Jen Campbell-esque stories about customers or experiences. I do actually want to keep the job!

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I’ve also been given a section to be responsible for. Basically, every bookseller has an area of the shop to keep tidy and arranged. Mine happens to be upstairs, the majority of the non-fiction section. I honestly don’t know whether it’s exciting or daunting. The part of my brain prone to catastrophising sees it as a task set to fail, something that can be used as a reason to terminate my contract when the time comes. The other half of my brain is optimistic that they trust me with the responsibility and believe I can wrangle such an eclectic selection into a display of commercial savvy.

Then there’s another part that says it’s a section of the shop that has a lower sales value and therefore less risk attached if I completely fuck it up.

So yes, I’m a bit busy and will probably continue to be busy until January. Just know that at some point there will be a glut of reviews as I catch up with telling you all about Renia’s Diary, After the Flood, Mooncakes, Sue Perkins’ autobiography – Spectacles, The Secret Life of Bees, and probably The Beekeeper of Aleppo too. For now you’ll have to survive on visiting the links to their Goodreads pages.

Now, if everyone reading this could pop into their local bookshop – on the off chance yours happens to be mine – and buy, oh what’s a realistic number, six? No, alright two, two non-fiction books (how about one history and one biography) that would be great. Also, if you’re reading this and know me, please send all your friends and family with the same instructions. Come on, it’s nearly Christmas, don’t all dads and granddads need a military history book from Santa?

~

If you enjoy my writing, want to see more, or enjoy being randomly generous, you can leave a tip in my ko-fi jar.

All Souls and Pumpkins

How are we all? Gotten used to the days being short and the afternoons barely existing? Not that I mind, I love this part of the year where it’s just a little too cold to be Autumn anymore but it’s not quite winter yet.

Okay, okay, some of that might be because there’s also Halloween and my birthday (I was 28 by the way).

Did you have a good Halloween?  Fed up with the sound of bells faintly jingling in the distance ominously?  Me too, that’s why I made Soul Cakes!

We all know Halloween stands for ‘All Hallows’ Eve’, right?  If not, go google it, enlighten yourself.  November 1st is ‘All Hallows’ Day’, or All Saints’ – Hallows being an old word for saints – and November 2nd is ‘All Souls Day’.  Traditionally (i.e. the UK before the reformation, puritans, and the civil war) all three days were celebrated as a way to commemorate the dead and the saints.  I would assume in typical Christian re-branding fashion the part involving saints was tacked on to a preexisting pagan holiday.

Halloween took all the attention for itself and we were cheated out of cake.  Delicious, delicious cake.

These little buggers are called Soul Cakes, and they are the tasty lovechild of scones and hot-cross buns.

On All Souls they would be handed out, possibly creating the basis for Trick-Or-Treating, and for every cake eaten a soul would escape purgatory.

This is the recipe I used but tweaked it a little, using half plain flour and half self-raising flour for slightly fluffier cakes.  If you can’t find currants I assume dried raisins will do, and I have absolutely no idea how to translate this in to cups.  Buy some scales.

Something to tie us over until Bonfire Night and compulsory birthday cake, and blockade early November from being swallowed up by Christmas promotions.

Speaking of baking, did you know that if you save the parts of the pumpkin that are removed while carving* you can puree them and make a good looking pumpkin bread?  Just leave out the water from the recipe, though maybe keep a closer eye on the baking time than I did…

Review of The Lady in the Cellar coming next week(ish), before I share a new NetGalley title with you.

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*don’t use the body of the pumpkin after a candle’s been in it, fumes get in to the flesh and that is not good to eat

New Book! The Lady in the Cellar, by Sinclair McKay

Okay, okay, I admit, I picked this based on the cover.  It’s almost Halloween, I can’t be blamed for wanting a couple of Gothic thrills.  Plus, I’ve been playing a lot of Sunless Sea; throw me a book set in Victorian London with a murder mystery in a part of London that isn’t f__ing White Chapel, and I’m yours for the week.  Or how ever long it will take me to read it…

The Lady in the Cellar: Murder, Scandal, and Insanity in Victorian Bloomsbury.  

 

A corpse found in a coal cellar, written in prose like a good documentary, from the same author as The Secret Life of Bletchley Park, potentially upturning some presumptions about the Victorian middle class?  Add in some dramatic motives and you’ve basically got fives items to put in a pentagram to summon me.

It’s already available on Kindle and Harcover, I got mine through NetGalley – aren’t I lucky.  Because what would autumn be without a Gothic true tale of murder most mysterious.

 

Follow the link to get your copy of The Lady in the Cellar by Sinclair McKay.

We like Hive.co.uk.  Hive pay their taxes.

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Welcome, welcome, kettle’s just boiled, shoes off by the door, ta!

So, here we are!

If you follow me on twitter you’ll know why I’ve made the move but let’s get the rest of you caught up.

Previously (and it will remain as something of an archive) I ran a tumblr blog under the same name, thecurvybookcase.  Sometime between September last year and this May, Tumblr marked that blog as explicit, entirely without any notification or reasoning – no idea whether it was reported by another user, if something I posted or re-blogged had been deemed explicit, or if it was just the work of an overzealous algorithm.

What did this mean for the blog?  No one would be able to see it unless they were signed in to Tumblr and had ‘safe mode’ turned off, it would be hidden from searches on the site, and it would be hidden from search engine results on the wider web.  Pretty much everything a host site could do to prevent a blog gaining any traffic.

Given that it’s been almost month since I appealed the status I highly doubt Tumblr staff will respond so I’m cutting my losses and moving to WordPress!

While I’m still getting used to the site any feedback on layout would be super, SUPER appreciated – I want to know how easy you find it to look at (if you’re dyslexic please tell me which fonts are best for you!), to navigate, what’s missing, gimme all your opinions.

In the meantime, go ahead and follow me on any of my social media accounts, stay tuned for actual content.sig