Sunday 25 September 2011

A Little Piece of Pie!

Hi – writing my blog then taking the rest of the day off, going en masse to our local pub for a good, belly-stretching lunch. Will regret, I know, but what the hell. Back home, fall asleep in front of the fire with an old movie droning in the background, dream dreams and snore the roof off until my wife’s inbound slipper wakes me up.
Anyway, here’s the threatened bit from Empress Gold; not enough to plot-spoil – a slight taste is all that it is:

‘You’re alive, Mister Goddard.’ Pasviri’s eyes narrowed. ‘In our new Zimbabwe, most men would regard that fact as recompense enough.’ He nodded to his entourage. ‘Leave us. I will join you shortly.’
In the quiet, two men, both of different origins stood just metres apart. Had it been a hundred years previous, rather than the surroundings of a plush office there would have been thick forest and the discomfort of cold guti rain to contend with. Their dress, as decreed by historical circumstance would have been, for Pasviri, fashioned from the skins of jackal and leopard, for Lee, a uniform of roughly woven calico, topped with slouch hat; across his chest would hang a soldier’s bandoliers, loaded with British South Africa Company’s, .44 calibre, Boxer-Henry ammunition.
‘In our grandfathers’ day,’ said Pasviri, ‘blacks were tolerated only under sufferance, the proverbial hewers of wood and carriers of water.’ He took his time lighting another cigarette. ‘Not any more, comrade. Along with your infamous Mister Rhodes, the heady days of white supremacy are well and truly buried – forever.’
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Tuesday 20 September 2011

An Unusual Get-Together!

Hi – grabbed my camera this morning and flew down the stairs, had to get this picture. Sorry for the bottom blurry bit, took the shot through the kitchen window; some cross-species interaction going on here, and why not? Wouldn’t it be great if we humans were keen to do the same – all the different colours, creeds and cranky old gits taking time out to mingle more – being nice doesn’t hurt. Look at the smile on the rabbit’s face; fur gets on with feather. Feel the peace, note the lack of guns, greed and groans – no wasting life with tanks and bombs, just sit on a wall and chat in autumn sunshine; a glass or twelve of Cape Shiraz or a flagon of Jacob’s Creek. Wouldn’t it be nice...?

Monday 12 September 2011

Hi From a Windy, Autumnal North of England!

Yup, the summer’s gone. Autumn though, I find just as likeable – stuck on this photo, just to show you why; pretty spectacular, a last show of colour before winter thunders down from the Arctic.
Been at my books again as I have already mentioned, Colonial Africa is my favourite genre: Selous’ Travel and Adventure in South-East Africa, Frederick Russell Burnham’s Scouting on Two Continents complete with a signed, hand-written dedication are but two of them. If I had money, that’s where most of it would go. Africa’s first editions – smelling of dust and adventure...
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Sunday 4 September 2011

Where and How I Work!

Hi, back as promised. Thinking of posting the occasional picture; some of where I work, warts and all – my own personal slice of ‘clutter mania’ with its aura of junk, cans and coffee cups. Sneak-peeks are always good interest generators. Will see what I can come up with – maybe some shots of days gone by.
Start writing at seven every morning. My work pattern sorts itself out. Usually kick off by sifting through the previous day’s work for typos and silly words. Silly words come out when I’m tired, crawling from under my keyboard; plot poisoners – slavering adjectives – hate the buggers. The odd one’s okay, then enough – verbs rule! Go for as long as I can, but by midday I’m verging on literary meltdown. No use carrying on, ‘cause from there on in, mush instead of storyline commandeers the pages. Walk time. Blow out the cobwebs and straighten my spine.
Been de-cluttering my bookshelves – a dangerous move. Like old photographs, old books have a tendency to suck me in so I end up nose down for hours, digesting the literary genius of past writers: Robert Moffat’s Matabele Journals, W. H. Worger’s City of Diamonds, and one of my favourites, Richard Hall’s The Ancient Ruins of Rhodesia, filled with contentious and often frowned-upon theories – that’s why I love it. That’s why I write, to share ideas and my passion for Africa. To take you there; let you see the gold, the storm skies, experience the discord, the greed and the sheer excitement that I have lived through.


Forgot to mention, Empress Gold is cracking along nicely – almost finished...
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