Sunday Salon

I’ve now started reading 100 Days on Holy Island: a Writer’s Exile by Peter Mortimer, a diary of the time he spent living on Lindesfarne, off the coast of north-east England, in a close-knit community of a 150 people. This is not a book about the history of the island but it is about what it was like for Mortimer to live there on his own away from his  family from January to April 2001.

It began badly as his father died just before Mortimer had planned to leave, and his nephew was very ill after an emergency operation. As it was winter there were few, if any, visitors to the island and the pubs and village store were closed for most of the time:

 It was silent in the way cities are never silent, silence not as a brief interruption from traffic, the humans, the incessant noise of civilisation, but silent as a way of being. What lay beneath the surface of this small settlement I had no idea. But on a bitter cold January night in 2001, it offered up silence as a totally natural state. (page12)

In preparation for his stay he had asked ten northern writers to select  a book (not written by themselves) that they thought might amuse,divert or challenge him during his stay. Nine of them gave him a book and I’m looking forward to discovering what they were. 

I can see already that I’m going to enjoy this memoir and hope the rest of the book lives up to the beginning.

I’ve dipped into The Breaking Point by Daphne du Maurier (short stories) this week and will continue reading that later on. Qiu Xiaolong’s Death of a Red Heroine has had to take a back seat for a while whilst I read these two books and I’m also tempted to start reading Martin Edward’s Take My Breath Away. I just wish I had more than one set of eyes and one brain to cope with reading multiple books – that would be excellent.

7 thoughts on “Sunday Salon

  1. Margaret – You’ve got such a lovely set of books to read there! I envy you your copy of Take My Breath Away; I haven’t gotten hold of that one, yet, but intend to. I’ve got the same problem you do, though; I’ve only two eyes and one brain…

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  2. Oh, I so agree about having an extra pair of eyes and brain… my tbr mountain would melt away then. Or would it? Maybe I would buy/borrow twice the books…

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  3. Margaret, I agree with the extra parts portion of your post. If I could just be listening to a book, reading one, and also working on the computer all at once. Sigh. Like Cath said above, I’d probably just have 3 times as many things to read. Have a good week!

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