Banana vs Peanut Butter cakes

Banana vs Peanut Butter cakes

Banana and peanut butter come together in an indulgent, perfect partnership in these cakes – the light, moist sponge keeps nicely for a few days, so you can bake them at the start of the week and try to make them last til Friday. ;) This recipe is free from dairy and eggs, so vegans are welcome. Those allergic to the “V” word can treat themselves to one and be pleasantly surprised – these darlings are just as good as cakes containing eggs and butter! Prove me wrong! Click below for the recipe and more photos…

Read the full post »

Bridgnorth

New Year’s Day – Went to Bridgnorth on a whim. Let’s go back in spring, take a train ride, walk by the castle walls and see the buildings all petite and crumbling.

It’s pretty even though it’s raining hard.

 

I’ve got various items listed on eBay at the moment, so do take a look if you’re interested in the odd RPG or unwanted DVD. :) Selling off a few forgotten things means I can pay my council tax and enjoy the extra space. I do detest clutter.

A few of the games listed must be reasonably rare, as they’ve attracted a fair few bids and questions thus far. I’m keeping my Final Fantasy collection, my rarest titles, and those I love too much to part with. Gotta save something for the next bill, right? ;)

CLICK TO VIEW ALL EBAY LISTINGS

 

Appleberry Crumble

Appleberry Crumble

I had no idea how simple it was to make apple crumble. Susan showed me the light and my life is better for it! This recipe will make more than enough crumble for two hungry souls, best served hot with custard on a Sunday afteroon. It’s completely vegan-friendly, but you can switch out the soya and Alpro custard for dairy alternatives, if you prefer. Don’t feel obligated to stick to the raspberries, either – crumbles are versatile, so just switch in whatever fruit you have that’s going spare. Click below for the recipe and more photos…

Read the full post »

Books read in 2011

A new year is here! Three hundred and sixty-five beautiful days in which I can escape to other realms entirely. I might be missing the point of all this. I don’t have any reading resolutions this year, because let’s be honest, I probably won’t read widely and I definitely won’t step away from the sci-fi and literary biographies that I love. Oh well. Here’s a list of everything I read in 2011, excluding manga, poetry and comics. This list consists of novels, non-fiction and graphic novels that I read from start to finish, either for the first time or as a re-read. At the end is a recommendation for five books I enjoyed best of all. :)

The list is in reading order, rather than alphabetical.

2011 READING LIST

  • Oscar Wilde and the Ring of Death – Gyles Brandreth
  • Palo Alto – James Franco
  • Byron: Life and Legend - Fiona MacCarthy
  • The Ladies of Grace Adieu – Susanna Clarke
  • House of Leaves – Mark Z. Danielewski
  • Talking About Detective Fiction – P.D. James
  • The Border Trilogy – Cormac McCarthy
  • Needful Things – Stephen King
  • Coffee with Oscar Wilde – Merlin Holland
  • Catch-22 – Joseph Heller
  • Flowers for Algernon – Daniel Keyes
  • Coffee with Shakespeare – Stanley W. Wells
  • The Colorado Kid – Stephen King
  • Cycle of the Werewolf – Stephen King
  • The Wind-up Girl – Paolo Bacigalupi
  • Child of God – Cormac McCarthy
  • The Great Shakespeare Fraud – Patricia Pierce
  • Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
  • Dracula: The Undead – Dacre Stoker
  • Oscar Wilde and the Dead Man’s Smile – Gyles Brandreth
  • Small Gods – Terry Pratchett
  • Our Tragic Universe – Scarlett Thomas
  • The Sunset Limited – Cormac McCarthy
  • Cell – Stephen King
  • A Game of Thrones - George R. R. Martin
  • Yes Man – Danny Wallace
  • Shutter Island – Dennis Lehane
  • Matilda – Roald Dahl
  • No Country For Old Man – Cormac McCarthy
  • The Talisman - Stephen King & Peter Straub
  • The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ - Philip Pullman
  • Among Thieves – Douglas Hulick
  • A Clash of Kings – George R. R. Martin
  • A Storm of Swords: Steel and Snow – George R. R. Martin
  • A Storm of Swords: Blood and Gold – George R. R. Martin
  • Stephen King’s N – Marvel Graphic Novel
  • The Once and Future King – T. H. White
  • The Winter Ghosts – Kate Mosse
  • Burton & Swinburne in the Curious Case of the Clockwork Man – Mark Hodder
  • Temeraire – Naomi Novik
  • Who Said the Race is Over? – Anno Birkin
  • 11.22.63 – Stephen King
  • Inheritance – Christopher Paolini
  • The Last Hero – Terry Pratchett
  • The American Boy – Andrew Taylor
  • Treasure Island – Robert Louis Stevenson
  • The Radleys – Matt Haig
  • Titus Awakes – Maeve Gilmore & Mervyn Peake
  • Young Romantics – Daisy Hay
  • The Night Circus – Erin Morgenstern
  • Mr Pye – Mervyn Peake
  • Wuthering Heights – Emily Bronte

Total books read in 2011: 54.
Total number of pages: 22, 377.

My Favourite Books in 2011

Byron: Life and Legend - Fiona MacCarthy

I was certainly born in the wrong era. To have lived in the time of the Romantics, the Cockney circle, the great poets I’ve been in love with for so long, would have been an honour. Would I have appreciated it at the time, or would I have been too involved with my (probable) tuberculosis? I’d like to think I’d be a scullery maid dangerously obsessed with Lord B, writing long letters in which I attempt to self myself to him for a single night of scandal. Fiona MacCarthy’s biography of Byron is rightly viewed as one of the definitive texts concerning the great man’s genius for poetry, and controversial personal life. It is flawless, so compelling I will never be parted from it. I will read it many more times, and though I’ve read other biographies since and will pick up many others in years to come, I can see myself always willingly returning to this one. A joy to read.

The Border Trilogy - Cormac McCarthy

This is one of the greatest works of fiction I’ve ever had the pleasure to read. I took it across America with me, and I can’t think of a better situation in which to enjoy it. Cormac McCarthy writes beautiful, haunting pieces, and everything of his that I’ve encountered has been brilliant, but the three novels that make up The Border Trilogy rise above everything else. My particular favourite was the second part, The Crossing, but I loved everything about it, and again, this is a book I plan to read many more times before my eyes cave in. Read the blurb, seek out reviews, ask a bookseller, I don’t care – if you want a story that will move you, both in terms of its emotional depth and the grand scale of its journey, these stories are for you.

House of Leaves - Mark Z. Danielewski

This is a re-read that deserves recognition, because this is the work that’s perhaps had the single biggest influence on my prose at present. Danielewski’s fearless experiments with page format and presentation inspired me to push my own work in directions I hadn’t thought of before, and visiting the House of Leaves early this year proved to be the perfect motivation for sticking with and working hard at my novel, Doors. It’s a frantic, disturbing work that will entrance some, and test the patience of many others. I find it frightening; it stays with me for days. Parts of it make me cringe away from myself. It’s a powerful book, and a beautiful one, too. Read it in a quiet place and don’t forget it isn’t real.

A Feast for Crows – George R. R. Martin

I include this book, but really I refer to A Song of Ice and Fire as a whole. This series took over my life this summer; after long days working in Holland, I would creep back to my tent, zip myself into my sleeping bag, and read a few pages by torchlight. A Feast for Crows is the highlight of a wickedly addictive set of books, the first of which has been brought to life on TV as HBO’s Game of Thrones. I have no idea who’s going to win said game (the series is still a lengthy work in progress), but I can’t wait to find out. Unbeatable fantasy fiction. I’m a little bit in love with Jaime Lannister, but who isn’t?

Wuthering Heights – Emily Bronte

It’s the last book I read in 2011, but also one of the best. It’s a classic I’ve always meant to read and I’m so very glad I got around to it. It’s got a wonderful emotional depth that moved me, and though I’m not one for romance, it’s a haunting story I can see myself enjoying many more times in the years to come. Now, how to choose one of the many film and TV adaptations to watch?

I’ve set myself a 2012 Reading Challenge on Goodreads (I completed my challenge of 50 books for 2011, hooray!). This year I want to read 60 books. I reckon I can do it; remember the dizzy heights of 2010 when I managed over 80? ;)

Year in review

End as you mean to go on. Or should that be start? We’re on the edge of 2011, staring down the barrel of 2012. I’m wrapping up this mad, tangled year with a cup of tea and a seat by the fire, basking in the glow of twenty-one successful eBay listings and the wonderful news that one of my poems has been published in the latest issue of Railroad. It’s a good way to wrap up 2011, and before I look ahead I would like to look back at everything else that’s occurred.

2011 was the year I…

…left the country.

At the end of February, after months of planning, I quit my job in the bookshop and travelled across the United States. They were the best weeks of my life. I cannot understate my gratitude and love for the people I met, the friends I made, lessons learned and experiences enjoyed. I wish I could do it all again only this time without it ending. Relive my USA adventure: here, here , here and here.

 

…recorded an audiobook.

Marley is probably the hardest working person I know. He keeps an eye on us unruly artists with his production company, Naplew Productions, and seems to have an endless supply of creative projects and brilliant ideas. I love him and loved working with him on the Fight the Sky audiobook, the making of which almost killed me, but I do adore the end result. Have you downloaded it yet? Have you laughed at my pitiful croaking towards the end?

 

…released Revolve.

2010 was all about my short stories collection. This year I released a second book under the Painting Lies imprint, a poetry collection called Revolve. It collects together pieces from 2004, right up to my return from America at the start of this year. I’m proud of it. Poetry is personal and it can be daunting to “get it out there” and into people’s hands, but I’ve managed it with this little book. I was also thrilled that the GoodReads promotional giveaway attracted over 700 entries from around the world. :) Still waiting on that first Amazon review, though…

 

…lived in a tent.

Between May and mid-October I lived in a tent in The Netherlands, working for a holiday company. I did this because I wanted to try something new, and also because I wanted the experience of working abroad. It was testing and an emotional drain at times, but I’m glad I did it. I met some wonderful people, got really into baking and fell head over heels in love with Holland. It’s best summed up by the poem I wrote, All Roads Lead To Duinhell.

 

…made a comeback.

After moving back to England, I went back from whence I came (for a short time, at least). I got a temporary position at the bookshop again. I sold a few books, found a few familiar, friendly faces, and slipped back into the routine of Wake, Work, Curse The Rail Service, Repeat.

 

…finished a novel.

I started writing a story, Doors, in May 2010, after Fight the Sky was published. I took it seriously then and still do now. On New Year’s Eve 2010 I completed the first draft, and have spent all of 2011 re-drafting and crafting it into something nigh on presentable. I’m happy with it and plan to publish it in the summer, if all goes to plan…

 

…started a new novel.

In November I set my heart on a follow-up to Doors. This will conclude the overall story, and kiss goodbye to another chapter of my life. For now, I’m calling this second novel Flipside. It’s still early days but it’s good to have that first draft creativity flowing again.

 

…lived alone.

Two days after returning from Holland, I moved into my own place. I’m in love with the solitude and can’t complain for all the space and opportunity I have to write, which is really all I’ve ever wanted to do. I know I can’t keep it forever, so I’m going to enjoy Solo Life while it lasts, and get as much out of it as possible. The day will come when I have to force my infurirating habits and obsessive behaviours on other human beings again, so we all might as well enjoy the peace for the time being.

 

…walked away.

There have been no specific confrontations, but I’ve walked away from many situations this year. I have no interest in struggling over things, or fretting, or worrying who or what or when I’ve caused an upset. At the beginning of 2011 I decided to Just Roll With It, and it’s a philosophy I can see myself sticking with. No arguments, no unnecessary emotion, no chasing after people or letting myself get hurt. Just pick yourself up and get on with it. Walk away if you have to. And if you can mend it later, try. :)

 

2012 is the year I will…

…try veganism.

I’ve been harking on about this for a few years now, and this time I mean to try. Since moving back to England I’ve been gradually removing dairy from my diet, and I think I’ll do okay. I can give this a decent chance. If It doesn’t work for me, I’ll be able to say I gave it serious effort. Here goes nothin’.

 

…publish a(nother) book.

Doors is coming. I want the second half ready by the end of the year. Push push push yourself apply apply apply and make somebody take notice.

 

…spread the word rather thin.

I will enter writing competitions (even the ones there is no hope of winning), I will find a writing group, I will talk to more writers, I will Get Myself Out There, I will try and I will believe. I will be nice. And most importantly, I will enjoy.

 

…study.

There’s a small plan forming, involving a course in the spring, and if all goes well, another in the summer. I don’t know what will come of it so I’m saying nothing more for now, in case it never happens. But I know self-improvement is an on going, wondrous thing that doesn’t come easy, so I’m taking steps over the next twelve months to progress myself further. There is always something you can be better at.

I’m looking forward to reading everybody’s hopes and resolutions for the New Year. I hope everybody enters it happy and achieves what they set out to. And hey, if the world’s still around at the close, maybe we can have this conversation again. :P