Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Lee on the Solent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lee on the Solent. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 June 2014

Back from the UK

Yesterday, Jen and I returned from our visit to the UK. It was the first time we’d been there for four years! The last time, of the 16 days we stayed, eleven were rain-sodden. Of course, we don’t go there for the weather, but to see friends. This time, we were blessed with sunshine throughout!

On Sunday 8 June, we flew via BA into Gatwick, which left 50 minutes late and arrived 30 minutes behind schedule, hired a Seat Ibiza (same make as our own car, though ten years newer!) and drove down to Lee on the Solent to stay with our friend Molly, who lives in a flat on the seafront overlooking the Isle of Wight. As Molly’s 86 – and planning her 90th birthday party – it was deemed less disruptive if we were put up in the spare bedroom of her neighbours and friends, Ken and Cathy downstairs, who were also excellent hosts. Ken’s a very good chef, too.

On the Monday, I saw Rick Barter, owner of the Bookshop on the High Street, then we visited some friends in the immediate area, including our son-in-law’s parents. We also frequented a few shops, too, though ever conscious of the expected weight of our suitcases for our return – and the depletion of the bank balance!

On Wednesday, 11th June I went to The Bookshop and met Rick Barter again, and also Jane Bwye, who would be sharing the book signing session. It’s a good idea to share a signing, I find, as during the quiet periods when there’s no passing interest, you have someone to chat to. And Jane, with her long past in Kenya, naturally proved to be great company. Sarah, a photographer from the local newspaper The News, dropped by and took several photos of our stall outside the shop. The weather was sunny and warm, but fortunately our table was in the shade from the awning. A good two hour session; books signed and sold and a number of bookmarks handed out.

We drove up north on the 12th, passing the Angel of the North, and shortly afterwards were met by our friends Margaret and Neil, who followed us in to the airport where we returned the Ibiza to Hertz. Then it was a short drive to their new house in Seghill, near Cramlington.

During this second stage we walked all over the Lady of the North (Northumbria), stood betwixt Scotland and England, trod the quaint historic town of Jedburgh (or Jethart, or Jethard), put foot upon the creaking floorboards of the house of Mary Queen of Scots, barely missed seeing the Commonwealth Games Queen’s baton (!), strolled through the aisles of the biggest second-hand and antique book dealer, Barter Books in Alnwick, ate too much and finally flew from Newcastle via Jet2, a carrier to be recommended, arriving 15 minutes early in Alicante, to be met by our daughter Hannah.

The Lady of the North
 
There was little time to devote to Facebook or emails during the period of absence. I had already prepared a daily post for this blog, the last of which was yesterday’s.

Further blogs will cover some of the above places of interest.

It’s good to have a break and see friends and the old country, but it’s good to be back home, too.

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Book signing for Sudden Vengeance

Today, I'm signing my books at The Book Shop, High Street, Lee on the Solent, Hampshire, England.
Between 12 noon and 2pm.
 
 
So if you're in the vicinity, please drop in!

The books I'm signing are Sudden Vengeance, Spanish Eye and Blood of the Dragon Trees.

Sudden Vengeance is a crime novel set in the Hampshire south coast town of Alverbank and is about a vigilante; Spanish Eye covers 22 cases of half-English, half-Spanish private eye Leon Cazador, 'in his own words'; Blood of the Dragon Trees is a romantic thriller set in Tenerife, involving trade in human trafficking and endangered species.



Joining me will be Jane Bwye, fellow Crooked Cat Publishing author of Breath of Africa, which is a romantic mystery set in 1950s-1960s Kenya. 
 
***
The proprietor of the Book Shop is Rick Barter, who became proprietor of in November 2004. He is originally from America. He grew up in New York City, although his family is from Maine. He has degrees from Tufts University in Massachusetts, The Sorbonne in Paris, and The University of Wales in Aberystwyth.

After a brief spell in retail sales (at Alexanders and Bloomingdales department stores in New York City), Rick began a 20-year career as an international educator and librarian, working at schools in New York, Austria, Spain, Lebanon, and the UK. In addition to articles in the professional journals, he has contributed to two books about multiculturalism and multilingualism. In addition to reading (!), Rick's interests include travel, architecture and design, and the performing arts. He speaks good French, decent German, laughable Spanish, and a smattering of Arabic. He divides his time between Lee-on-the-Solent and London.