About Me

My photo
Editor... Bookseller... Blogger?

Wednesday 21 November 2012

Lies, And The People Who Write Them


The article below was written over the past few days, over which I have been ingesting large amounts of pain medication for a frozen back. This may have added or detracted from the quality. Feel free to let me know which...


When I think back on my childhood, it often strikes me that I was potentially a little bit… strange. Quite delusional, in fact.  I was once so jealous of a neighbour’s holiday to Italy (I had spent three weeks eating midge sandwiches and falling off roadside cliffs near a rainy loch in Scotland), that, in order to ‘glam up’ the situation somewhat, I convinced his entire family that the trip had been as a result of a rare genetic disease which could only be treated in a remote area of the Highlands. My rave reviews of the Scottish NHS proved so credible that his poor mother came over bearing gifts and sympathy, to the total bemusement of my own family.

Scottish summer: you can see why I lied...


I am sure, however, that the lies I told were never malicious. I lived half in / half out of an extraordinary world of children’s literature – and it seemed to me that my suburban English life just didn’t match up. It was all very unfair.

My parents steadfastly refused to become anything other than what they were. Although they displayed a level of eccentricity, this was somewhat limited to my dad playing the recorder and developing an unfortunate taste for socks with sandals. My mother seemed more promising. She  had a Gallic temper prone to wild tantrums, a belief that all products with the word ‘conditioner’ were interchangeable and laboured under the misapprehension that sending me to school with a bowl haircut somehow didn’t constitute child cruelty. In the end, though, they remained quintessentially embarrassing rather than mysterious.

Ever walked in to find your mum happily pouring shampoo into the washing machine? I have!


When a nanny arrived at my house, I had just finished reading the Mary Poppins series. I eyed the new arrival with hopefulness and suspicion. Sadly, she spent less time taking me on fantastical adventures through a London I never knew existed and rather more time running up exorbitant phone bills and patiently ignoring my attempts to produce lampshades from her knock-off Louis Vuitton handbag.

Perhaps my metropolitan upbringing was the problem, then? According to Enid Blyton, the countryside was dotted with ne’er-do-wells, just waiting for a small pudgy child like me to foil their plans. Conveniently, one of my grandmothers lived in an inhospitable part of the North Yorkshire Moors. After several summers spent fruitlessly searching for adventure, however, I sadly concluded that the countryside, in Yorkshire at least, was as full with sheep and their droppings, craft fairs and old people who mysteriously knew my name as it was devoid of menacing pirate-type figures.

I don't know, maybe they're just very well disguised smugglers?


It is because of this, I think, that I started to lie to myself and to those around me regarding the finer details of my life. I once gave a school presentation about my side-line job as a lion-tamer. I may have fooled precisely no one, but my classmates and teachers were nice enough to play along, at least to my face.

It may only have lasted a couple of years, but thinking of my career as an extraordinarily inept fibber makes me squirm with embarrassment. It is with some degree of relief, therefore, that I have just discovered that one of the major sources of my self-delusion was, in fact, somewhat inaccurate.

 My Family and Other Animals, by Gerald Durrell, was, is and will remain one of my favourite books of all. An autobiographical account of the great zoologist’s childhood spent roaming in a semi-feral state around Corfu, it cheerfully makes no distinction between its human and animal cast of characters. All are treated with a sort of wry amusement, deep affection and a meticulous dissemination of their strengths and foibles. 



One character with more foibles to exploit than any other is his eldest brother, Larry. A character of enormous self-importance, he stalks in a grandiose manner through the pages, doling out unwanted advice, taking almost hysterical exception to any perceived offence or challenge and displaying an attitude more commonly associated with maiden aunts in Richmal Crompton books when confronted with any of Gerry’s vast array of pets.



Having principally read this book as a child, Larry took a back seat in my affections. He was too adult a character, patronising and aloof. I preferred reading about the bird and mammal life which Gerry scooped up on his travels and inflicted upon his long-suffering family. Amongst these were Quasimodo the Pigeon, Alecko the gull, Widdle, Puke and Roger the dogs, and the magenpies. All of these served to infuriate Larry, and I sided with them wholeheartedly. I was a little sceptical when reading about Gerry’s attempts to smuggle in a family of scorpions, but when they turned on the older brother in question, I cheered them on quite happily.

In short, Larry was, if not an antagonist (he was presented with far too much humour and affection to assume that role), then certainly a model of an older brother I was so glad not to have. I couldn’t fathom how difficult it must have been to live with him. Until a few days ago.

I recently picked up The Bitter Lemons of Cyprus. A few pages in, I realised that instead of taking in the details of the story, I was instead being nagged by a feeling that I had missed a connection.  Finally, it hit me. The author, Lawrence Durrell, was Larry.

Tada!


At first, this delighted me. How much better would the world be if all giants of the literary scene were presented to us as flawed personalities, bathed in the harsh-spotlight of a child’s -eye-view?  Instead of the awed tones of literary biographies, how much more fun would it be to discover that Hilary Mantel once threw a tantrum whilst riding a donkey on Blackpool beach? Or that Will Self collected Beanie Babies until an embarrassingly advanced age? If I owned a publishing company, those would be the authors I’d seek to recruit.

That's pretty impressive, Will. But you know they're not worth anything if you cut the tags off, right?


But perhaps it’s best that I don’t. On doing a little research, I discovered that it wasn’t quite that simple. Like me, (and this is a bit of a stretch, comparison-wise), Gerald Durrell was a bit of a fibber. The Durrells did live in Corfu, and Larry did live with them. For a while. But firstly, he was married. Secondly, he only lived with the rest of his family immediately after their arrival. Shortly afterwards, he and his wife (who is never mentioned in MFaOA) moved out – and who can blame them, in an environment where a little boy was not unknown to hoard vicious and/or venomous creatures inside the house?

Should we be disappointed by this? I don’t think so. Authors (and small children) often exaggerate scenarios for comic effect, and the reading experience is all the more pleasurable for it. It may be more fashionable these days to advertise embellishments ‘on the tin’ so to speak; Jenny Lawson calls her autobiographical collection of blog posts a ‘mostly true memoir’ and Miles Kington hinted at it in the title of his book ‘Someone Like Me: Stories From a Borrowed Childhood’, but the tactic is exactly the same: enhancing comic scenarios for the benefit of the reader. Furthermore, the only potential loser from the situation would have been Lawrence himself, but he was clear-eyed enough about it all to see that, at its heart, his brother’s book captured family life with the Durrells pretty well, saying:

"This is a very wicked, very funny, and I'm afraid rather truthful book — the best argument I know for keeping thirteen-year-olds at boarding-schools and not letting them hang about the house listening in to conversations of their elders and betters."  

In other news:  vampires don’t sparkle, Hogwarts doesn't exist, owls aren't scared of the dark, inviting tigers round to tea leads to rather more than being eaten out of house and home - and I never required specialist Scottish surgery...


Tuesday 6 November 2012

What Reading Taught Me


I would love to say that the bottom-clenching dedication I have been known to display towards correct running-order in my section at work extends to my own personal collection. Really, I would.
Unfortunately, that would be a white lie. Or an untruth. Ok, a complete whopper.

The maths is simple:

(26 years of almost continuous reading + shelf-space equivalent of about 3 Billy Bookcases) x 1 off-duty bookseller = a total mess


As a result, when the tectonic shifts in the array of books directly above my bed lead – as they often do – to an avalanche (bookslide?), it is just as likely that I will be woken up by a John Klassen picture book (light, but sharp) to the neck as it is that I will instead be roused by a Graham Greene hardback (blunt, but extremely forceful) to the face. I call it my bibliogralarm and it never fails to surprise.


(On a not-unrelated note, I have had to remove this book of postcards featuring hirsute gentlemen of the 1970s from the shelf in question. It’s just too terrifying a wake-up call.)


A slightly less painful side effect to my blatant disregard of the laws of both alphabetisation and the Dewey Decimal System  is that books that I associate with each-other tend to stick together, regardless how tenuous the thread.  

Such a thread links The First Wives Club by Olivia Goldsmith, The Queen and I by Sue Townsend, The Stephanie Plum series by Janet Evanovitch and, incongruously, Lady Chatterly’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence. These books can be found huddling together on one shelf because, when reading them in my pre- teen years, I discovered that they all shared one common feature: S.E.X. 



Let's play odd one out...


Though varying wildly in style, tone and explicitness, they taught me what my science teacher had yet to work up to courage to tell us. Most children learn about the birds and the bees through a confusing amalgamation of medical diagrams, gabbled parental speeches and what is often ominously referred to as The Street.
Although it took me another term or so to be able to confidently label an anatomic chart (the names I had learnt were somewhat more libidinous and to be used within the school confines at my peril), the frank descriptions afforded in my reading material assured me a working knowledge of the ins and outs of the process, so to speak.
Pre-teen inquisitiveness appeased, the books in question came to rest beside each other on my bookcase. As the book-tide ebbs and flows around my room, they remain together, reminding me of how I worked out the mechanics of sex whilst drawing unwise and frankly bizarre associations between the reproductive act and guns, gardeners, big hair and communist revolutions.

            
 The ingredients to sexual chemistry, by Siouxsie Pimm, aged 12 3/4


In the weeks and months ahead, it is likely that I will return to the bizarre juxtapositions of my books as fodder for the ever hungry ‘subject’ field of this blog. However, for the time being I leave you with the pleasing thought that should a Marxist revolution championed by armed gardeners with 1980s hair occur, my agenda may differ somewhat from that of the rest of the population.

Monday 29 October 2012

A Christmas Gift Guide for the Indecisive


It feels a bit early to be posting about Christmas, but since festive stock started arriving at the shop in early August, and the DFS Christmas advert - that hallowed benchmark of the holiday season - has taken over our televisions and 4OD screens, I don’t feel like I’m jumping the gun.

It’s a common misapprehension that the process of gift-giving during the festive season is an intuitive thing. Perusing last year’s crop of irritating brain worms (sorry, adverts), one would be forgiven for thinking that one trip to a larger branch of Curry’s would get the job done. But for those of us who feel unable to stretch our meagre budgets to cover the entirety of the white-goods aisle of a large electricals store, it can be, and often is, a very trying experience.

Yeah, Santa's low on ideas, too

Gifts for well-loved friends, lovers and family members pose their own set of problems. However, buying for the newest member of a social group, an odd uncle or terrifying colleague can reduce even the savviest shopper to a gibbering wreck, grabbing wildly at the humorous cravats in Tie-rack, then wondering in baffled self-loathing what possessed you as the recipient opens your carefully packaged otter-themed tie with polite disinterest.  

Thanks, that'll go great with my otter slippers you got me last year...

Here’s what I suggest. In times of doubt, go with a book. Books are never offensive (unless you really lose it and plump for Mein Kampf). Here is my guide to book-buying for awkward people.

1: THE MISANTHROPE

"I hate everything. Apart from this hat. This hat is inheriting everything"


Actual quote: ‘Could you help me find a present for my mother, please? She hates everything and everyone. No, seriously, she’s a horrible person’

Suggested gift: We Need to Talk About Kevin


The blurb: Eva never really wanted to be a mother; certainly not the mother of the unlovable boy who murdered seven of his fellow high school students, a cafeteria worker and a teacher who tried to befriend him. Now, two years later, it is time for her to come to terms with marriage, career, family, parenthood and Kevin’s horrific rampage in a series of startlingly direct correspondences with her absent husband, Franklyn.

Why it’s perfect: Nothing good happens in this book. Seriously.  Nothing. It’s an unrelentingly bleak description of motherhood, childhood, the works. It’s everything a romcom isn’t. Reading it is like wading through a treacle of unending depression. Its glory lies in the fact that in spite of everything, you continue to pick up the book, night after night, long after lesser written works would have been discarded to moulder with the dust-bunnies under your bed. However disturbing it might be to imagine the misanthrope experiencing a satisfying tingle of shadenfreud from the sheer human misery contained, at least you’re offering them the nearest approximation of a happy Christmas they’re likely to have barring natural disasters.

2) THE NO-FACE


You got me a present, right?


Actual quote: ‘I don’t know what to do. My brother’s invited his new girlfriend round on her birthday. I’ve never met her, and all he can tell me is that she’s scared of hamsters. Apparently that’s hilarious’

Suggested gift: A hardback edition of Rebecca



The blurb: “Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again…” Working as a lady’s companion, for the heroine of Rebecca, life looks very bleak until, on a trip to the South of France, she meets Maxim de Winter, a handsom widower whose sudden proposal of marriage takes her by surprise. She accepts, but whisked from glamorous Monte Carlo to the ominous and brooding Manderley, the new Mrs de Winter finds Max a changed man. And the memory of his dead wife Rebecca is forever kept alive by the forbidding Mrs Danvers.

Why it’s perfect: Everyone loves Rebecca. Almost inarguably Daphne Du Maurier’s greatest novel, it’s a ghost story with no ghost, a love story where the heroine is never named but is, by the end, undoubtedly the plot’s strongest character. It’s a timeless classic, written in a wonderfully unpretentious style that doesn’t put off readers who might find older classics harder to digest. More importantly for the no-face, it’s almost completely inoffensive without being bland. Gorgeous hardback editions are available fairly inexpensively without looking cheap. (If all else fails, the no-face should appreciate the fact that they themselves could pass it on to their own difficult-to-buy-for friend). Bonus points awarded to those who include the URL for Mitchell and Webb’s parody in the accompanying card. 






3) THE GAMER

No, no, anti-stereotyping league of Britain, thank you!


Actual quote: ‘My little brother is a nightmare. He only ever plays video-games, but if I buy him anything, he either hates it, already has it, or everyone else in the family has got it for him too’

Suggested gift: Ready Player One



The blurb: It's the year 2044, and the real world has become an ugly place. We're out of oil. We've wrecked the climate. Famine, poverty and disease are widespread. Like most of humanity, Wade Watts escapes this depressing reality by spending his waking hours jacked into the OASIS, a sprawling virtual utopia where you can be anything you want to be, where you can live and play and fall in love on any of ten thousand planets. And like most of humanity, Wade is obsessed by the ultimate lottery ticket that lies concealed within this alternate reality: OASIS founder James Halliday, who dies with no heir, has promised that control of the OASIS - and his massive fortune - will go to the person who can solve the riddles he has left scattered throughout his creation. For years, millions have struggled fruitlessly to attain this prize, knowing only that the riddles are based in the culture of the late twentieth century. And then Wade stumbles onto the key to the first puzzle. Suddenly, he finds himself pitted against thousands of competitors in a desperate race to claim the ultimate prize, a chase that soon takes on terrifying real-world dimensions - and that will leave both Wade and his world profoundly changed.

Why it’s perfect: Admittedly, if the intended recipient is someone who loves games to the exclusion of all else, getting them to even open the book will be the real challenge here. You can lead a gamer to sci-fi, but you can’t make him/her read. However, I am disregarding the massive proportion of self-styled gamers who don’t exist as a cultural stereotype and  do love to read – if your target is one of those, so much the better. Ready Player One by Ernest Cline is an absolutely perfect gift for anyone who so much as picked up a console during the late 80s/early 90s and has a working knowledge of John Hughes films. Every page is a nostalgia trip, every sentence an homage to a culture that spawned the gaming industry. The fact that this is stitched perfectly into a futuristic and dangerous world makes it more than the novelisation of one of those irritating I Heart the 80s nostalgia docs, becoming instead a tense high-tech thriller with its roots firmly lodged in the recent past.

4) THE HISTORICAL ENTHUSIAST

Sigh, I know... but I defy you to find a better picture


Actual Quote: ‘I’d like to get my Dad a fiction book. He only really reads history and it drives mum mad. He keeps talking about battles to her when she’s trying to sleep’

Suggested gift: A few here, depending on the period of history concerned. My knowledge of (and interest in) battles is limited, so I’d recommend taking your chances with a Bernard Cornwell or two for that sort of thing. Here are a few more options.

First World War: Regeneration by Pat Barker  (if you’re feeling super-generous, stretch to the rest of the series, The Eye in the Door and The Ghost Road)



Mini review: Regeneration charts the real life encounter between war poets Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen when they met whilst in treatment at Craiglockhart Mental Hospital in Scotland. Wilfred Owen was recovering from shell shock, whilst Sassoon had been committed for writing a letter condemning the prolongation of the war which was read out in Parliament. Barker’s book is incredibly well-researched but, above all, beautiful and sad.

The Thirties: Rules of Civility by Amor Towles



Mini-review: An absolute JOY to read. Meet Katy Kontent and Evie Ross and travel back to 1930s New York, where they roam around the city, being fabulous – at least, initially… What sets this book apart for me is that it never hits the shallow waters of ‘fabulous fiction’ such as Sex and the City and the like. Katy and Evie are fun but flawed and experience events that SATC wouldn’t touch with a well-manicured fingernail. But what’s incredible is period fiction where the woman comes out on top. Katy takes some stick, and doesn’t always win, but she always has a nice little comment to finish off the encounter – she always gets the last word. It’s difficult to write about this without making it seem like standard chick-lit, but believe me, it’s not. It’s just that explaining what makes it stand out would be revealing a major plot point. And we don’t believe in spoilers! Take it on trust, people, it’s a wonderful gift.

Second World War: Mr Chartwell by Rebecca Hunt



Mini Review: This isn’t actually set during the war, but it does feature one Winston Churchill. It’s perhaps an odd book to choose, seeing as it never mentions the battlefields, the holocaust or anything from the war itself.  However, it’s an exploration of Churchill’s depression, through the personification of the Black Dog that he so often spoke about. On the one hand you see how depression can begin; encroaching slowly but surely into someone’s life and personal relationships. And, on the other, the long-term effects; explored via the Churchill character, on your life and career. As depressing as this may seem, it’s a wonderful and enlightening book.

5) THE CULTURE VULTURE

Oh Google images, you never disappoint...


Actual quote: ‘So, this guy only reads prize-winning fiction – or at least nominated. He’ll probably get more Hilary Mantel than you can shake a stick at.’

Suggested gift: The Teleportation Accident



The Blurb: When you haven't had sex in a long time, it feels like the worst thing that could ever happen to anyone. If you're living in Germany in the 1930s, it probably isn't. But that's no consolation to Egon Loeser, whose carnal misfortunes will push him from the experimental theatres of Berlin to the absinthe bars of Paris to the physics laboratories of Los Angeles, trying all the while to solve two mysteries: whether it was really a deal with Satan that claimed the life of his hero, the great Renaissance stage designer Adriano Lavicini; and why a handsome, clever, charming, modest guy like him can't, just once in a while, get himself laid.

Why it’s Perfect: I am now taking bets at odds of 90/1 that the Culture Vulture will NOT have read this book. Whilst it was longlisted for this year’s Booker Prize, it failed (incomprehensibly) to make the shortlist, and is not yet available in compact paperback format which usually boosts sales of such books. In other news: It is Perfect. In every sense. The story of a man trying so hard to get laid that, despite hailing from Berlin in the 1930s, he manages to miss the rise of the Nazis is always going to be an eccentric read. It combines history, satire, farce, raunch and brilliant prose in more or less equal measures. Oh yes, and did I mention it was longlisted for the Booker? It bears repeating as, when the Culture Vulture peels back the wrapping on this diamond of a book, you can nod sagely, quote that fact and instantly gain 10 bonus points (exchangeable for five mince pies and a second helping of brussel sprouts at the going rate). But before wrapping it up and saying goodbye, give it a quick read, careful not to bend the pages – or, indeed – rip them out whilst roaring with laughter. Yes. It’s that good.

That’s enough recommending for one post, I feel. However, if you’re still at a loose end, why not pop into your local bookshop and ask a member of staff for some advice? You’d be surprised how many people are shocked SHOCKED that we actually read the books we sell. And if I can come up with recommendations for elderly women who hate the world, I’m sure they can fix your problem too. In the mean-time, let’s sit back and watch the Christmas gifting machine ramp up. There are (unlit) Marmite Xmas lights on Oxford Street which seem to show an elf vomiting into his little elf-hat. Let’s pause and think about that for a while...  Oh well, at least it’s not a fridge.

Smeg indeed...



Monday 22 October 2012

This Information is Classified


Worlds Apart

 
 

Think of your favourite book. Is it fiction? Or non-fiction? If you were to subcategorise it, where would it go? If it’s a fiction book, would you say it was a historical romance? Crime? Sci-fi? Fantasy? If non-fiction, where would you find it? Biography? Spirituality? Sports?
 
In some cases, usually with non-fiction books, the answer is mercifully obvious. Booksellers are rarely stuck holding a Bill Bryson, wondering where on earth it should go.

Sometimes, however, it’s impossible to tell. No one can read every book under the sun. That’s where software comes in – in theory. Most bookshops will have a database of titles, along with the sections and subsections in which they should be shelved. But therein lies the problem.

 From my own experience working in a general fiction department, things can become very tricky. Whilst Tolkein, R.R. Martin and others are safely filed in sci-fi/fantasy, along with their casts of elves, dragons, goblins and wizards, a mixture of popularity and author preferences have resulted in some very odd classifications.
 
 

John LeCarre, arguably THE most famous spy novelist of this century, appears in general fiction. Deborah Harkness, author of A Discovery of Witches (containing real, bona-fide witches with magic spells) also falls under the same category.

It would be a simple task to simply go against ‘the system’ and re-shelve them under more intuitive headings. But, not only would this only confuse those using the database as a search tool, but we would still be left with some anomalies.


 
 
fig i: a goblin, yesterday

 

Case in point: Margaret Atwood. Although a large number of her novels are set in the ‘here and now Earth’, there are certain notable exceptions. Both The Handmaid’s Tale and Oryx and Crake are, to put it bluntly, not. But Atwood is famous for her rejection of the sci-fi label. Those works are, she says, ‘speculative fiction’, stories which couldn’t happen in the here and now, but are not beyond the realms of the imagination. Frankenstein, she argues, would come under the same classification because, when it was written, the reanimation of the dead was considered a scientific possibility in the near-future.


 
fig ii: science
 

Leaving aside the argument of the complete subjugation of women as a possibility in the near future, we are still left with the issue of classification. ‘Speculative fiction’, even if defined by Atwood’s own terms, bears more resemblance to the sci-fi label than to general fiction. But to reallocate her accordingly would seem disrespectful to the author’s wishes, as well as leading to the (extraordinarily paranoid) fear of incurring her wrath, should she ever chance to visit that particular store.

 
We could create a new sub-category. But then, where would we stop? It would be too easy to sub-categorise until Howard Jacobson alone would find himself in the general fiction section, having unwisely proclaimed: “I write fiction. The others write crap,” earlier this year.

 
So Margaret Atwood et al remain in general fiction. In real terms, this is nothing more than a categorising anomaly. However, I do wish people would stop asking for recommendations, listing Murakami, Rowling, Atwood or some other author of science (or speculative) fiction as a particular favourite, then crying out “Oh, but I don’t read science fiction” when offered something from another, elf-populated part of the shop.

Hold Me Closer, Pony Danza...


Let’s Pretend This Never Happened

By Jenny Lawson

 

 

 

At the time of writing, Badly Stuffed Animals (the Facebook group for fans of grinning foxes, misshapen owls and strangely flirtatious cats) has accumulated roughly 54,341 ‘likes’.  That’s over 20,000 more than the average attendance to a Premier League football match.

But, of their legions of fans – how many would get entangled in vicious Ebay bidding wars in order to purchase an exquisitely stuffed miniature pony, with the aim of naming him ‘Pony Danza’, “Pony Soprano” or possibly even “Al Capony”? How many already own a small diorama of a jazz band made up of ethically taxidermied mice in bow ties?

Enter Jenny Lawson, A.K.A The Bloggess.

Largely unknown in the U.K outside of certain Internet communities, Lawson’s ‘mostly true memoir’  Let’s Pretend This Never Happened came out in paperback in spring of this year. Although an internet celebrity in her own right, having never followed the Bloggess’s activities online is actually an advantage when reading her book. Firstly, comprised as it is of mainly autobiographical blog posts, the book format allows Lawson to tell her life story chronologically.  Secondly, her humour hits you full force. Right to the face. The recommendations on the cover are no mere rent-a-quotes: Lawson is seriously funny.

It’s all somewhat unexpected. One of the first things that you learn about the author is that she suffers from Rheumatoid Arthritis, OCD, Depression and Social Anxiety Disorder. It’s hard to think of a more socially and physically disabling cluster of diseases. But, somehow, they all become grist to Lawson’s mill. Ever winced after a party remembering some minor gaffe or social faux-pas? Read about Lawson hiding in the toilets after telling a group of strangers about a serial killer attacker that turned out to be a cat. You’ll feel better.

But it’s not all gallows humour. The author’s penchant for amusingly (and ethically) taxidermied creations, coupled with stories of her unusual childhood as the daughter of a man not unlikely to toss wild bobcats at potential suitors makes for an engrossing, lively, occasionally dark, but, it bears repetition, intensely funny read.

It seems everyone’s writing a memoir this year; and in the run up to Christmas, thousands will become duplicate Christmas presents. Take a chance on something a little more bizarre, if only to find out why, whilst the name BeyoncĂ© isn’t exactly as synonymous with giant metal chickens as it is with global pop-stardom, it should be.
 
 

www.thebloggess.com