Poem: "Its Weirdness Is Evident Without Comparison"
Jul. 7th, 2026 09:33 pm( Read more... )
(by which I mean, A very bravely ventured back to B&Q again, this time DID get The Goods, aaaaaaaand then discovered that even cut down they didn't fit in the car so they still needed to be attached to the roof rack with ratchet straps--)
we have achieved PROOF that the windows CLOSE when they have ratchet straps slung around both TOP and BOTTOM
we have a house at 26.7°C and an outside world at 26.1°C and it's time to go to bed
[Gru's plan goes here]
-- but hey, maybe at least we'll manage to discourage it from getting significantly warmer in here? and maybe I'll wake up early enough to open the house up usefully while we're still below 20°C tomorrow morning?
Oxford, 1920. For the first time in its 1,000-year history, the world’s most famous university has admitted female students.
This would be rather startling to the ladies who had studied as home students, at Somerville, Lady Margaret Hall, St Hugh's and St Hilda's, before women were admitted to Oxford degrees which was what actually happened in 1920 -
- and those ladies who were still around were there to collect the degrees they were now entitled to.
I am so hoping that this is a blurb produced either by AI or by some intern at the publishers who has not actually read the book but has gathered that it is about women going to Oxford in 1920?
Because if the book is written in some apprehension that there were No Female Students among the dreaming spires before 1920 I hope the author is visited in her sleep by the shades of all, or at least some of, the women who were, who included some notoriously stroppy and acerbic characters.
This is even more egregious than the historical romance which posited a daughter of an Oxford prof at a date of obligatory celibacy for College fellows, which is a bit niche perhaps, but Women's Struggle for Education is surely well-documented???
(Come on down, Vera Brittain, The Women at Oxford: a fragment of history)
In further Did Not Do The Research, or at least have a Brit-Picker, JD Robb Stolen in Death has significant plot around theft of Important Jewels - from the Tate in London, wtf, surely you meant the V&A....
So, it looks probable that I am coming up to be the next person to suggest A Book for the in-person reading group.
And I recently had a flash of inspiration, why not something by Naomi Mitchison?
Except that when I come to Do The Research, hardly anything is at present actually in print, chiz chiz chiz.
I really don't think I can moot The Corn King and the Spring Queen which is Very Long.
We're doing a memoir for the meeting next week so perhaps not Among You Taking Notes.
Otherwise it's The Blood of the Martyrs, about the early Christians, not perhaps as good as the earlier Classical Antiquity novels, or Travel Light, which is not my own favourite among her fantasy works.
I really fancied blowing their minds with Memoirs of a Spacewoman but although there is a Kindle edition of the Italian translation, if you want to read it in English secondhand copies come pricey.
(INFAMY!!!)
So I have to think of something else.
To switch to an entirely different track, maybe Rosamond Lehmann, Dusty Answer, the archetypal Sad Girl Novel?
Hell, maybe I should go for Cold Comfort Farm.