Hello all. I hope that you are ok. I think we did it, didn't we? Came out the other side, I mean. I hope that your Christmas was, hopefully, uneventful. Unless, of course, you were wishing for excitement and danger. I am too old for all that palaver.
We have spent a pleasant few days eating, chatting and walking, and that is more than enough to fill a Christmas. Telly was rubbish. We all sat down to watch the latest Knives Out on Christmas Day on Netflix, and it was excellent. I am saving the Sewing Bee for later, as no one else seems very interested. But I can't think of anything else that I wanted to watch. Culturally, because I find myself being of a bit more delicate disposition these days and because approximately 90% of everything that is released is horror (it's cheap and it makes a lot of money), I have only a few things to recommend to you this year.
In film, my favourite was The Ballad of Wallis Island, which was just lovely, but I also liked A Real Pain, which is about two brothers on a Holocaust Tour in Poland. (I know, I know, but trust me - it was excellent). As I said - Knives Out - Wake Up Dead Man is a great watch, and Christianity comes out of it reasonably well, which makes a change. If you don't mind a bit of horror, my daughter and several other people say that Sinners is excellent. Apparently, they are vampires, but they can all sing really well - or something.
On the telly - I am struggling a bit, as I said. I think it is difficult to see past "Adolescence" and quite right too. I watched it in one go when I was on my own on a Sunday morning. I spent most of it sitting on a footstool (hurt back), thinking that we are possibly living in the end of days. I really liked "The Residence" about a murder in the White House, and The Change. Other than that, I just seem to float in and out to watch Only Connect/Sewing Bee/Bake Off/The Football, so I don't have much to give you and bow to HOH's knowledge. He really liked All Her Own Fault, The Ambassador and Blue Lights. He thought Shetland had "gone off the boil" a bit.
Books. I have read quite a bit, but not all of it new. My annual Barbara Pym re-read, for instance, was Jane and Prudence. I also re-read Gaudy Night by Dorothy L Sayers. I'd forgotten how much Latin and Poetry and indeed what seemed to be Latin Poetry in it. My favourite was A Small Bomb at Dimperley by Lissa Evans. This is about a country house and its residents after the war. It's funny and sweet but with an edge. I read Shy Creatures by Clare Chambers early on, but I think it came out in paperback this year. Can't recommend enough. There are really too many to mention, but I loved The Frozen People by Elly Griffiths, and I always like a Horowitz, so did enjoy Marble Hall Murders. I also read Discovering Christianity by Rowan Williams, but now I'm not sure if I am a Christian because I could not make head nor tail of it, and every Christian you have ever heard of LOVED it. Bah!
There is a possibility that Christmas has left you like Joseph in this painting by Orazio Gentileschi - The Rest on the Flight into Egypt. If so. I hope you can spend some time resting and getting a bit normal again as we go into the New Year.
Happy New Year, all.


In agreement about much of your tv reviewing. 5 days staying with daughter #2 and the big telly in Manchester enabled us to bingewatch through series 5 of Dark Horses. [And discover that the bit they filmed in Romford only appeared at the very end in the trailer for series 6] i should not worry about the veracity of your faith. Haven't read the book myself, but when RW was ABC, I'm afraid he always reminded me of a squirrel in a mitre. Im currently reading a book by poet Luci Shaw who died recently. It is challenging, but cheerful. Still ploughing through Louise Penny's Three Pines Canadian detective series. Some of them better than others.
ReplyDeleteA thought occurred to me in the middle of my sermon yesterday: so Joseph has this dream, get up, go to Egypt, take the family. NOW.
And so he wakes up and does just that. Question - did he wake Mary up and tell her to start packing, or was she already awake, feeding a sleepless baby? Your picture sums it up wonderfully! I don't know OGs art very well, but I don't like his daughters stuff.
Joy and blessings to you and yours for the year ahead!
Happy new year when it arrives...
ReplyDeleteApart from football we seem to share a liking for the same TV programmes. One day we will succumb to Netflix....
Rowan Williams is such a mysterious mystic that much of his writings remain a mystery to me...
Happy New Year to you and all your family. Looking forward to your posts in 2026.
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