Sunday in Oxford
May. 25th, 2008 11:05 pmWe went to Oxford yesterday, partly to mooch about the bookshops, partly to go to the botanical gardens. It's 20 minutes on the train from Reading, which seemed the perfect travelling distance.
So we mooched a lot and found a new second hand bookshop, where I scored heavily in quality if not in quantity: one copy of Dracula, Prince of Many Faces by my old friends Radu Florescu and Raymond T McNally. It's their follow up, many years later, to In Search of Dracula

An art installation in the grounds of what was the old gaol and is now a branch of the up market hotel Malmaison (Bad House, fittingly). The junk furniture is apparently arrayed to imitate the layout of the old cells.

Nice book shop near Oxford Castle, stuffed full of genre fiction, run by a very nice man who told me it was his dream to run such a shop. He was a part time heating engineer too and had blueprints spread out on his desk - multitasking to make ends meet. He was great.

My book yay!

Dramatic iris is dramatic at the botanical gardens

There was a patch of bobble-headed alliums surrounding huge silvery artichokes

A huge crumpled leaf

My decision-making story die, 50p each from Borders. I haven't had any decision making crises yet, but am looking forward to having one soon.

Lemon muffin, omg. It was delicious with a latte.

Portrait in a bin - Matt is next to me, reading Patrick O'Brian, and I am reading my new book and taking photos.

My feets, randomly. I'm chucking these plimsolls soon, because it is now impossible to stop them smelling bad.

Cherry beer on the way home and more healthy water. The wee bag is an incredibly useful present from
i_am_zan - a tiny insulated cool bag, with a tag that says 'lube sheep' on it. I use it fortaking my milk and probiotic yoghurt drinks to work
So we mooched a lot and found a new second hand bookshop, where I scored heavily in quality if not in quantity: one copy of Dracula, Prince of Many Faces by my old friends Radu Florescu and Raymond T McNally. It's their follow up, many years later, to In Search of Dracula

An art installation in the grounds of what was the old gaol and is now a branch of the up market hotel Malmaison (Bad House, fittingly). The junk furniture is apparently arrayed to imitate the layout of the old cells.

Nice book shop near Oxford Castle, stuffed full of genre fiction, run by a very nice man who told me it was his dream to run such a shop. He was a part time heating engineer too and had blueprints spread out on his desk - multitasking to make ends meet. He was great.

My book yay!

Dramatic iris is dramatic at the botanical gardens

There was a patch of bobble-headed alliums surrounding huge silvery artichokes

A huge crumpled leaf

My decision-making story die, 50p each from Borders. I haven't had any decision making crises yet, but am looking forward to having one soon.

Lemon muffin, omg. It was delicious with a latte.

Portrait in a bin - Matt is next to me, reading Patrick O'Brian, and I am reading my new book and taking photos.

My feets, randomly. I'm chucking these plimsolls soon, because it is now impossible to stop them smelling bad.

Cherry beer on the way home and more healthy water. The wee bag is an incredibly useful present from
no subject
Date: 2008-05-25 10:10 pm (UTC)Very, very cool. ♥
no subject
Date: 2008-05-25 10:41 pm (UTC)Lemon muffin. Mmmmmmmmmmm.
Have you learned anything interesting about Dracula?
no subject
Date: 2008-05-25 10:56 pm (UTC)Lovely pictures! Cherry beer? I'm very fond of raspberry and black currant lambic but I don't think I've tried cherry yet.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-25 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-25 11:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-25 11:38 pm (UTC)lord byron's diary was burned because he was a vampire
the first one is a bit of a literary joke, it's what if Polidori was right and Byron was a vampire, the second is stoker investigating the mystery around Lucy Ruthven and other mysterious deaths around his theatre
the third is Lord Rochester and the settling of america, and has a rather interesting thought on the plague and has the main character with milton trying to decipher the voynich manuscript, and the fourth is ancient egypt and suggests Nefertiti was a vampire
they're great because they're really well researched, Tom holland is a literary scholar first so he knows his stuff, even little details
like vampire polidori's breath smells because he drank acid, and the second one has vampires in the raj with proper Kali worship, it starts as rudyard kipling, goes to sherlock holmes and ends up more robert louis stevenson and it's deliberate.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 02:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 04:02 am (UTC)Also, I find myself tempted to try making a lemon muffin like that one now - was the filling more of a lemon curd, or some sort of custard?
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 05:33 am (UTC)Looks like a pleasant day rambling about. Your beer is quite strange to me. Are you sure it's alcoholic?? ;) And does it *really* say Bacchus on the bottle??
Plimsolls, Chucks, Dunlops. Three words, but they are they same thing! I find this very cool. I have a red pair of Cons actually (as in Converse All Stars) and I love them to death. Well I haven't yet, but I probably will. They replaced a pair of black and white Pony's which I *did* love to death. Why do we get so attached to our sneakers that we will wear them even when they are torn and stink???
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 06:58 am (UTC)And a pic of Mr & Mrs Lux!
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:01 am (UTC)RIP shoes, damn I really need a new pair.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:31 am (UTC)No one knows if this is true or not, but it's the only written down references to Vlad's wife.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:33 am (UTC)Cherry beer is so good, guh. It's quite strongly flavoured, so in that way it's a bit dangerous to drink because it tastes so innocent. I do recommend it. The brand I like best is Bacchus.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:35 am (UTC)I think I have actually perused this in Watestones recently. It does sound right up my street.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:38 am (UTC)The muffin had a sort of lemon curd filling, or possibly more like a thick lemon sauce. It wasn't quite as rich as lemon curd. Mmm lemon curd. It's been years since I had that.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:44 am (UTC)Apparently, it's brewed in Belgium, which I never knew.
Dunlops! I never heard that one before. There's nothing like a pair of battered old converse. It's so hard to throw them away.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 09:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 10:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 12:23 pm (UTC)Also very inrigued by Matt's reflection. I've often wondered what he looks like ^_^
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 05:35 pm (UTC)(I've been fed several varieties of the stuff, in a quest by beer-geek friends to find a brew that didn't make me gag...no go. I could still taste beer under the fruit. Looks like I have to stick to cider!)
no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 06:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-26 10:40 pm (UTC)Oops! Sorry about the bung tag!
no subject
Date: 2008-05-27 12:23 am (UTC)The best thing about Converse is that they're so versatile, and once you break them in they're actually comfortable. ♥ I literally wore mine until they were falling apart. :D