vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
My current main reading, on my Kindle, with utterly gargantuan font needed for disability reasons. A mix of fiction and non fiction, history, SFX magazine columns, and oh so very much Venice. I’m starting a virtual tour of Venice for a few months (self directed), and reading is part of it.

Screenshot of a Kindle Paperwhite in portrait mode, with black and white / greyscale screen. Two rows of 3 book covers are visible. On the top row are "Echolands: A Journey in search of Boudica" by Duncan Mackay, "The Glassmaker" by Tracy Chevalier, and "The SEX Column and other misprints" by David Langford (the first collection of his SFX magazine columns). On the row below are "Venice Tales: Stories selected and edited by Katia Pizzi" (with a gondola on the cover), "Restoration London: Everyday life in London 1660-1670" by Liza Picard, and "A History of Venice" by John Julius Norwich (the cover didn't download properly).
vivdunstan: photo of an Oor Wullie art sculpture in the Geddes Quadrangle at Dundee University (dundee university)
Mysterious "John Wiley & Sons" parcel dispatch email. I guess the next Scottish History Society volume? Which I've a chapter in! My piece is about a historical poem written about the appointment of a new court judge at Melrose in 1682. Most of the historians contributing to the book are associated with Dundee University!

I think its official publication date was in early December. But it's taken a bit longer for the books to be produced in print. I will just be very glad to have my copy in hand! And read the work by other historians. Each chapter is an annotated transcript of an original document plus accompanying essay.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
My current main reading, on my Kindle as usual, so I can have the gargantuan font (think old Ladybird learning to read books for the very youngest!) to counteract my neurological illness reading problems. Note I am reading all these books at the same time. I am flighty!

Screenshot of a Kindle Paperwhite, black and white / greyscale. A number of book covers are visible, showing books currently being read. On the top row are 3 book covers: "Hamnet" by Maggie O'Farrell (showing a scene from the film version with Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal), "Stone & Sky" by Ben Aaronovitch (featuring a map of the area around Aberdeen, Scotland) and "Echolands: A Journey in Search of Boudica" by Duncan Mackay (featuring a statue of the legendary Icenean queen). On the row below that are "Restoration London" by Liza Picard, a "Complete Sherlock Holmes" collection by Arthur Conan Doyle, and "Normally Weird and Weirdly Normal: My Adventures in Neurodiversity" by Robin Ince.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
My current main reading, on my Kindle, so I can read with the utterly gargantuan font that helps me keep reading with my progressive neurological illness. The 6 books shown are the ones I'm currently mainly cycling through. A mix of fiction and non fiction reads.

Screenshot of a Kindle Paperwhite e-reader in portrait mode with a black and white screen. The view shows 6 book covers, in 2 rows of 3. At the top are "The King of Elfland's Daughter" by Lord Dunsany, "Stone & Sky" by Ben Aaronovitch, and "Echolands: In Search of Boudica" by Duncan Mackay. Then on the second row are "Wintering" by Katherine May, "Restoration London" by Liza Picard, and "The Black Archive #72: Silence in the Library / The Forest of the Dead" by Dale Smith. Each book has a percentage number showing progress so far. Some are further through, e.g. 26% on "Wintering" and 17% for "Restoration London", while others are newer started.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Here's the screenshot from my Kindle, showing the main books I will be reading on there this month, with utterly gargantuan font etc. Some are already under way. Others like Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu are lined up for my book club later. My main novel read at the moment is Katabasis by RF Kuang, a dark academia book about a journey into Hell to rescue an academic advisor. Am really enjoying it. Last night I started my annual pre-Halloween reread of Roger Zelazny's A Night in the Lonesome October, which is a gothic horror delight. And I am going to try to read just a chapter a day this time! Liza Picard's Restoration London is a reread. Though she wasn't a formally trained historian I am in awe of her approach to the historical sources and questions. The Complete Kobold Guide to Game Design was a birthday present from Martin. Just getting into it now. And I continue my reread of the original Sherlock Holmes short stories, now well into the Return collection.

Screenshot of a Kindle Paperwhite, black and white / greyscale colour, showing two rows of three books. On the top are "Katabasis" by R.F. Kuang, "A Night in the Lonesome October" by Roger Zelazny, and "Restoration London: Everyday Life in London 1660-1670" by Liza Picard. On the row below are "The Complete Kobold Guide to Game Design", "Carmilla" by Sheridan Le Fanu, and a "Complete Sherlock Holmes" collection.
vivdunstan: Portion of a 1687 testament of ancestor James Greenfield in East Lothian (historical research)
And that's stage 2 of the book chapter indexing completed. Sitting at 100 lines in my text file. Multiple page refs to same thing merged into single lines (inc a few hefty page ranges for chapter core subjects). But that's enough for now. Will finish tomorrow (checking, editing, reordering & formatting). The full chapter I'm indexing is 16 pages long in proofs, mostly a transcript of a 1682 historical poem. Because that poem mentions an awful lot of historical people and events, it needs surprisingly hefty indexing. I believe my index will be combined with other chapter writers? (not ideal, but ...) Indexing has been fun, though I'm not 100% sure whether I should have included an entry for "Meg 'the Marling'" with no surname known. But generally taking over inclusive approach rather than under indexing! I did train and qualify as a book indexer long ago, before realising my progressive illness was already too advanced.

Indexing

Sep. 8th, 2025 06:31 pm
vivdunstan: Portion of a 1687 testament of ancestor James Greenfield in East Lothian (historical research)
Been doing some last minute indexing of a piece coming soon in a Scottish History Society Miscellany book volume. And reminded again just how much I adore this historical poem about events at the Melrose local court in 1682!

First task of the indexing completed, with numerous candidate index references highlighted in the page proofs. Will type up and edit down later this week.

I researched this local court and its cases as part of my taught MPhil history dissertation 20+ years ago. Only after finishing my degree did I discover this amazing historical poem about the court and its very unpopular new judge. I am so happy to have been able to write and publish an annotated transcript of the poem along with an introductory explanatory essay.

Close up of a page proof of lines from a poem with explanatory footnotes below. Some words are highlighted with pink marker pen. The poem section at this point tells how the key individual was "educat at Melrose schooll" but a poor pupil, more interested in "wenching" and stenching his "youthfull lusts", and was thrown out by his father from the family home. Notes below give more details about the life story and also the history of schools and schoolmasters and Melrose in the seventeenth century.
vivdunstan: Portion of a 1687 testament of ancestor James Greenfield in East Lothian (historical research)
Lovely is waking to proofs of the next "Miscellany" volume from the Scottish History Society, including my own piece - full annotated transcript plus accompanying essay - about a historical poem about events at the Melrose court in 1682. Very much looking forward to seeing the finished volume in print.

I studied the Melrose local court records for the dissertation portion of my taught MPhil history degree at Dundee, 2001-3. I only discovered this poem lurking hidden in the depths of the Edinburgh national archives afterwards. And was rather stunned, because it correlates closely with the history as recorded conventionally, while providing a totally fresh take on it. All including a vitriolic character assassination of the newly appointed judge! It took me ages to transcribe the 17th century handwriting - definitely at my limits. But got there, and then ended up sending in a proposal for an edited transcript + essay for the Scottish History Society. Which was accepted. That was 6+ years ago. It's taken a long time to get to print. But nearly there now!
vivdunstan: Portion of a 1687 testament of ancestor James Greenfield in East Lothian (history)
Wanted to brainstorm new academic project ideas. Still have lots to work out. But helped hugely by just rediscovering my handwritten notes from quite a few years ago for further academic journal paper possibilities based on my PG research into the local Melrose (Scottish Borders) court 1650s-1680s. That was for my MPhil (taught PG) history dissertation at Dundee University. I built a huge database of nearly 2500 local court cases, almost 10,000 participants. So much that I can research further. Amused at my handwritten note "researching court officials more inc my g..uncle the punching judge"! I also want to do more new historical research projects, as much as my progressive neurological disease allows. But I do have this mass of Melrose local court material readily accessible and already largely digitised. And I can certainly look at exploring its possibilities further, in multiple ways.
vivdunstan: Portion of a 1687 testament of ancestor James Greenfield in East Lothian (historical research)
After submitting another academic journal paper (wish me luck!) briefly pausing to take stock of others in progress. 4 more in development; all Scottish history; 16th, 17th, 18th & 19th centuries; genealogy & court history, legal history, black history, music history & popular culture. Lots to do!

Researching, writing and submitting these - including dealing with all the *fun* of peer review - as a sole author is *interesting*. But something I enjoy, and will keep doing for as long as I can.
vivdunstan: Sidney Paget drawing of Holmes and Watson in a railway carriage (sherlock holmes)
Onto another story, and unashamed disclaimer up front: this is one of my all-time favourite Holmes stories. spoilers )
vivdunstan: Portion of a 1687 testament of ancestor James Greenfield in East Lothian (historical research)
Wish my brain would stop thinking "I'll just look up another 16th/17th century testament (will and/or inventory) to study in ScotlandsPeople" when the website is still down! Hope it comes back ok after its latest upgrade / revamp. And hope it's not as disastrous as some other website revamps inc SP.

To be fair it's not as though I don't have enough existing historical document images on hand to work on. I just perversely want to go to the website - at the worst possible time! - and get more.

Books haul

Aug. 9th, 2024 10:26 pm
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Here are the three books I bought today in Toppings St Andrews and at the Wardlaw Museum in St Andrews.





vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Although I struggle hugely with print now I can still generally read plays in that format. And rarely read them in ebook. But I did this time, to reread Macbeth, which I probably last read 35 or so years ago in school. I've also more recently seen other televised or movie versions. So do remember much of the plot.

Reading a play script book is often rather strange. This time I decided to ignore the lengthy analytical introduction, which to be honest was better read after I'd finished. And dived straight in. Much of the play has a very minimal cast, but there's backstory and wider things early on that can get confusing. The scenes focusing on Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are best. And why does Banquo talk in such a flowery long-winded way?!

Reading an ebook version of a play text had the advantage that it allowed lots of useful jumping about easily to footnotes. And this Penguin edition was well footnoted. Usually to explain specific words rather than lengthy academic history paper type digressions! For example I was thrown by the word "sewer", thinking it literally meant that place. But no, it was a servant. Thank goodness for footnotes.

I am amazed just how many key quotes there are in this particular Shakespeare play. Many of which I remembered from long ago, but others surprised me by popping up here. It's remarkably packed full of stuff.

And action packed. Oh yes, action packed. Staging it must also involve a lot of fake blood ...

As a Scottish historian it's also fascinating to see this depiction of Scottish history, through a 17th century English lens, with the complex situation of James VI and I not long on the throne in London.

I plan to watch the Ian McKellen and Judi Dench 1970s stage version soon. Meanwhile yes, that was a good read.
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
Making a start on my goals list for the week, while I have a very disturbed night neurologically.

Some bits of this document are vastly easier to read than others. And I remain rubbish at reading abbreviations for numbers in the period. But can improve that. This is good practice.

vivdunstan: Part of my family tree (genealogy)
Happy to be sitting up doing some more old document reading. And thank goodness again for easy colour/balance graphics processing software to make it more readable! Here a testament testamentar (Scottish will and inventory) from 1648. The vast bulk of this 3-page document is a very detailed will. By my 11xg-uncle. Which mentions so many relatives, only some of whom I've figured out. This is related to the academic journal paper I've mentioned recently about the royal secretary (his granddad).

A side by side view of a document, on the left in its original pale contrast difficult to read state. On the right the same document has been colour and balance adjusted, to be much clearer to see. Though still very scribbly 17th century handwriting!
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Both poring over the 400th anniversary British Library facsimile Shakespeare First Folio we bought. It is a very accurate reproduction of an excellent BL copy of the original. And yes we had to look up the bear stage direction. Very nice item to have, large, with sturdy hardback binding in slipcase. Unlike the Norton one it uses just a single copy of the original book as its source. Which may mean it is less clear to read in places. But book historian me - and Martin too! - is a lot happier with this for authenticity and provenance reasons. Now the challenge is where we will shelve it. It's a whopper! 4kg and 35cm x 23 cm x 8 cm.
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
From Samuel Pepys on this day in 1660: “And afterwards did send for a Cupp of Tee (a China drink of which I never had drunk before)”
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
Reminded of a talk I gave 10 years ago today to the Economic and Social History Society of Scotland conference in Inverness. As I wrote then: "Also my talk on 17th century Melrose area court records went well. I said two things I didn’t plan to say: 'CSI Melrose', and 'Murrrdddeerr' a la Taggart! I do improvise a lot in conference talks, and am never quite sure what I will say!"

I don't think I'll ever be able to give another academic conference talk again, given my progressive neurological illness now, but it was fun while I still could. For this one back in 2013 I had to use my wheelchair that day. Luckily the venue was pretty accessible.

New icon

Jan. 10th, 2023 11:34 pm
vivdunstan: Portion of a 1687 testament of ancestor James Greenfield in East Lothian (historical research)
Just added an icon for my historical research posts. It’s based on the testament (after death thingy, similar to probate in England) for an ancestor in East Lothian in 1687. Here’s the original source image.

Profile

vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
vivdunstan

July 2026

S M T W T F S
   123 4
5 6 78 91011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 11th, 2026 12:49 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios