Then it was off to a antiques craft village (Dagfields Farm), where I managed to spend £30 on books in very little time, despite not having a working cash card yet… it's hard to resist two beautiful 1895/1896 pocket editions of Tennyson ('Locksley Hall' and Other Poems, 'The Spinster's Sweet-Arts' and Other Poems), another Left Book Club edition (Ruth Gruber's I Went to the Soviet Arctic, 1939), Susannah Radstone's Sweet Dreams, about sexuality and gender in popular fiction, a Moomins book I now realise I already have, a good Faber edition of Selected Poems of Louis MacNeice, John Christopher's The Year of the Comet and an M. John Harrison novel I hadn't previously seen, The Committed Men.
Best of all, I hardly scraped the surface of the place and will have to return again, and again, and again…
3 comments:
M.John Harrison is a judge for the Manchester Young Persons Writer award so I've read pieces of his work to get his frame of mind. It is surreal, to say the least.
Any information you have on him, Nicholas Royle and Sarah Hall... do tell me, Vole. I wouldn't say my life depended on it but to an extent, it does within the ghetto we live in and the mayhem after the gig I attended at the Wulfrun tonight.
If you had a pound for every book you bought/had bought for you that you already had, would you be a millionaire?! ;-)
Just been on the garden website, looks great, I must go!
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