Book Rambling

Today will be an in and out day. I shall be in for most of the morning, editing, and then nipping down to the dentist, then home and then staying in, reading. I’d fallen out of the habit of regular reading, so I am giving myself at least one hour a day with a proper book, usually on the balcony during the ‘quietening hour.’ This is the time, from about three o’clock onwards, when the day boats start to leave, and a general feeling of hush falls over the part of the harbour I can see. When the last one leaves sometime after four, there is then the ‘very quiet’ hour, when not much out there moves at all. There’s always an end-of-term feeling to the day down there, an aftershock of relief after another mad day of the nosey and the ecstatic, the bewildered and the frantic. Relief from the crowds who block the roads, follow their guides, do as they’re told and then become completely bewildered as to what to do for the rest of their four hours here. The ecstatic make the most of it in admiration of the sights, the architecture, and the climb to the village, or they enjoy the excitement of a safari made by bus or taxi, while the frantic are another story. They have planned, researched, seen pictures asked questions and know what they are doing: walk to there, quick dip, hurry to there, bus at this time, up to the top, find museum, find museum closed (should have researched more deeply), get out Google Maps to get down to the harbour, get lost, can’t find the cycle way or the two lane highway that Maps say is a road but is in fact 390 steps, but somehow make it back to the boat on time.

All imagined from up here, of course, as I am only going by memories of being down there at that time, but if that’s what is still going on, then I can feel the aftershock of relief from the balcony, and that’s when it’s a good time to read.

Anyway, what is it to be next?

That’s one shelf of the kind of thing I’ve been reading over the past eight years: History, mainly Victorian, and if you look closely, you’ll find some gems. ‘Dying for the Gods’ was particularly hard work, and sorry to say, I’ve forgotten most of it, but then it was specialised (human sacrifice and bog bodies in archaeology as background to a mystery novel). The book, ‘Plaka’, I picked up in a second-hand bookshop in Athens, and it’s all about the history of that part of Athens, with drawings and photos. It’s a Greek publication if anyone is interested in borrowing it. ‘East End 1888’ is particularly fascinating if you are interested in that specific year beyond Jack the Ripper. I’ve just finished, though, Agatha Christie’s autobiography, and I’ve been through all of these on this shelf, so I need to look for something else. That, after having my teeth examined, is this afternoon’s job. I may have to go to the next shelf, where I am once again tempted to read ‘Dracula’ for about the 40th time. Or I may have another bash at the first page of the Poe novel (I’ve never got beyond the first sentence/page – it feels like they are the same thing).

Anwyay, that’s me today. Who knows what tomorrow will be like? That page has not been written yet.

Sparrows and Sunbeds

Not much to tell you about apart from my day-to-day, which I won’t bore you with because I didn’t do much yesterday. In fact, I was at home all day writing, reading and doing not much else. Meanwhile, though, Neil photographed this in the square.

They were only a few feet from his workstation table. The other day, I walked past a turtle dove sitting on the ground with one wing out, and I thought it had been damaged. I stood not two feet away from it, and was about to take a photo (which felt like rubber-necking an accident) but it stood up, waddled away and then flew off. Just sunbathing.

Plenty of that to do right now, with the temp a reasonable 28 to 30 in our courtyard shade, not that I do any sunbathing there or anywhere, come to that. Sunbed Wars continue apace on the beaches it seems. ‘Sunbed Wars’ isn’t actually a war as such, but it is an ongoing discussion between tourists and residents alike about the varying cost of a place to lie all greased up and pinking. There seems to be a fashion among the wealthy these days that a) because they are wealthy, only they matter, and b) they’re happy to pay €1,300 a week for a villa holiday because they can, but then get all hot under the Cavalli if a sunbed costs more than they think it should. They are perhaps the sort who revel in the fact that, on some beaches, one pays twice as much for a thing near the water as you do if you take one at the back. Like the age-old snobby thing of how you ‘Took the opera’ last evening, and ‘Of course had a box,’ while the poorer classes sat in the pit happy with their lot. ‘We were so close, when Bartoli gave us her Queen of the Night, some of her spittle actually reached us! Jeremy has not washed since.’ You know, that kind of baloney which angers me, and to which I say, ‘Ms Bartoli would not sing that area, dear, she’s a mezzo. Get your stories right.’

Anyway, no idea what that has to do with sparrows or sunbeds, where, I think the point was that Sunbed Wars rumble on as pointless as a never-ending TV show (The Blacklist, Payton Place, Eastenders), and I shall keep you informed if I hear anything more.

Welcome to my first thing

I’ve just been through my morning emails. The usual. ‘Hi, I’m a visibility specialist…’ Yeah? So am I, when I put my glasses on, so what?
‘Hi, Wilson. I am from Capital FM, and we do interviews…’ (No signature, a Gmail account, no branding, no point, and who’s Wilson?)
All that kind of thing, plus one from a grumpy bank manager in Dubai who has been awaiting my response to his last email so we can discuss this money thing. “… this is urgent, and it is in connection with surname.” I can’t help feeling that it should have come out as “… this is urgent, and it is in connection with {SURNAME}” because he clearly got his macro auto-fill thingy up the spout.
So, welcome to my first thing.

I’ve been noting some common questions of late, people asking if they can get a boat from Symi to Halki (not directly, no), and asking if there are any places to eat in the village (yes, and more to come). The windmill that was once a restaurant called ‘The Windmill’ looks as if it’s about to reopen any time soon, but don’t ask me who or what. There’s speculation running around the platia about what was the cocktail bar, the other bar, the grocer’s shop, the sandwich shop (all the same place), and what it will be, and I know as much as the next person who doesn’t know very much. The rumour is, it will be an eatery of some sort. That will bring the total of eateries to seven in the village. Can’t say I am fond of the word ‘eateries’, there are too many Es in it, and it sounds very close to catteries and batteries, which must mean I have an aversion to the suffix ‘eries.’ Not to the places themselves, of course…
As I said, welcome to my first thing.

There was another question about island life, and that was to do with payments for taxis and buses. Yes, we are in the same century as everyone else now, and yes, you should be able to use a card to pay for everything (as long as the machine is working, the internet is working, and the proprietor wants to carry on working), but for a €2.50 bus fare…?

You know, cash is very important, because unlike those bucket airlines where you have to pay for everything, churches don’t yet have those machines connected to the internet and banks, so when you pop in to light a candle, take some cash to leave in the box. Can you imagine if they, too, went the same way as Ryanair and the rest? Walk into church, swipe your card for a blessing of Holy Water, and again for your candle… Imagine in the CofE churches… You’re going up for communion, you kneel at the altar rail and realise you’ve left your card back in your pew, so you pause the anthem while you dash back and get it, then queue again for the second round where the vicar solemnly offers you ‘The POS terminal of Christ…’ so you can run your card through it before receiving communion. ‘It’s for the family, Father,’ you whisper. ‘Will you be doing a discount today?’ So much easier to put a 50p piece in the box by the organ so the organist will give you another eight bars of ‘There is a Green Hill’ than sliding your card through the slot and using the stops to tap out your PIN.

Silliness. The point is, always have some cash for things like the bus, the church plates or charity boxes, the cab you decide to take on the spur of the moment and so on. Otherwise, yes, everyone should be taking cards, and I, now, should be working, so I’m off to ramble some more elsewhere.
I hope your first thing has started well.

Back to Work

We’re back to this. Me emptying my mind of whatever is in there onto virtual paper first thing in the morning. It’s 5.50, the temperature outside is a decent 25°, and I have the desk fan on because this room is always a little stuffy first thing. I’ll open the window when the mosquito hour has passed. If I open it now, I’ll spend the next hour trying to defend my feet beneath the table and swatting the buggers that investigate the screen.

I managed to finish the epic first draft of the last book in the third series, and in a day or so, will start again on the next and, hopefully, final draft. That was about my only achievement of the week, that and having some time off, which I didn’t know what to do with. I managed also to finish a biography of John Steinbeck and started on Agatha Christie’s autobiography, imaginatively titled ‘An Autobiography,’ and I am up to 1923, by which time she was 33 and had had three books published, so there’s a way to go yet.

I also saw some sights during the week, because to see sights around here, you only have to keep your eyes open. For example, we stopped at Pacho’s one lunchtime and discovered this:

A dish of things to go with your beer. That was a first for me. Must have something to do with the younger set who are now managing the bar. Also, we came across these:

They can be found in Yialos, in the shop that sells all the herbs, spices, oils and so forth that you might be looking for (terrible how the name escapes me right now). Along from the church towards the post office, on the corner by Taxas, which, by the way, isn’t pronounced Taxas as in Texas, but Ta-has, but with the X being a Greek X which is pronounced as a voiceless velar fricative, so there you go. (As in the German, Bach.)

There have been other adventures, such as having a hen bring her chicks down to visit, the parakeet popping by, and yesterday, the turtle doves sunbathing on the path and not bothering to move as I walked by. Very trusting. I also witnessed typical privileged tourist behaviour. You know, the sort of younger visitor who, having spent a good hour sitting in her BF’s lap in the café next door and chewing his face off, then decides to make a phone call, so wanders down to the next bar, plonks herself on a seat, puts her feet up on another seat, and yaps away for ten minutes, before leaving her ash in the ashtray, and wandering back to her own café. Well, honestly.

But let’s not start the week on a grumpy note, as I am sure there will be more of them to come in time. Can’t wait!

A Few Days Off

A note in advance. I am coming towards the end of an epic first draft, and I hope to have it finished over the weekend. Either way, I’m going to take a few days off from everything while I see to that and then put my writing feet up for another day or two. This means no more early morning nonsense from me until after next week. As I’ve nothing much to say today anyway, I’ll leave you with a gallery of recent photos to browse while I go and finish my manuscript. (Which makes it all sound very grand, when it actually means, I’ve got another 20,000 words at least to bash out before starting the thing again.)

If you’re in the mood for something to read and you’re into the mystery and thriller genres, then I’ve got this list of 73 titles by various authors whose books are available on various platforms, including paperbacks and immediate Kindles. You’re bound to find something here:

https://books.bookfunnel.com/mysthrillsus-jun/ckrwlbx0gy

And, hopefully, you will find something to look at here:

Back soon.

Writing on a Greek island