But no Turkish Delight

Boar’s Hill on a subzero January day does a passable imitation of Narnia towards the end of the Witch’s reign.


Look close and you see that everything is picked out in lines of frost. It’s like the setting on Adobe Illustrator where you can reduce a picture down to a line drawing.



At one point we crossed over a small stream trickling down between two of these exquisitely outlined frosty banks, leading me (sorry) to start gibbering “Aslan is coming! Aslan is coming!”

The event: friend DW, who I must have known for a good decade or more (as opposed to DW, who I’ve known since about 2001 or DW who I’ve known since about 2004) has a birthday at this time of year and always organises a birthday walk with friends drawn from all walks of his life. Ten years ago the group was exclusively adult but suddenly babies started happening, all mysteriously at the same time, leading to a group of kids all about the same age (and mostly male, for some reason).


DW isn’t actually giving them communion, just chocolate coins which are of course renowned for their warming effect.

From the Fox, through some fields and frosty woods that are still primeval Oxfordshire and where wolves really ought to prowl, up to Jarn Mound to look at what would have been quite a view if the mist hadn’t been there, then back to the Fox for a warming luncheon. Hardier souls continued with part 2 of the walk, less hardy or those with some serious blogging to do peeled off and headed home.

It just wouldn’t have been the same without the frost, but now we’ve done that, we can have the warm weather now, thanks.

Indigestible

A distant memory stirs like some sluggish primeval beast. It’s been so long that for a couple of seconds I was even taken in by the envelope: “72-hour notice of document delivery”.

“Wow,” I thought, “this must be important …”

… plus (half a second later) “so why not just send the important document now …”

… plus (finally) recognition. “It’s them. They’re back.”

I am one of the 2% of households in Abingdon invited to take part in the Reader’s Digest prize draw. I could shortly be the winner of £250,000! The envelope came complete with a certificate that a total of £300,000 has been deposited at the NatWest to cover all the prizes. First prize: £250,000. Number of prizes: 2058. Do the maths to get the average runner up prize.

If past form is anything to go by, they will send me six personal numbers which might just might be eligible for entry into the draw. I have a sneaking suspicion they will be eligible. It would be an awful lot of bother to go to just to send me a load of duff numbers.

There’s a picture of the large orange envelope that will fall through the letterbox. It has all the usual seals and barcodes on it to make it seem Very Important. (What exactly are we to make of “This communication to be delivered to named addressee only”? Who else is it likely to be delivered to? Is a busy postman expected to ring the bell and wait, shivering on the doorstep to press it into my eager hands?) The envelope will positively shriek that if just one of those numbers wins then £250,000 could be mine. Much the same way as I could walk down the road where I live and heave a brick through each window. “Could” does not equal “probably will”. In fact the brick-through-window scenario has a greater chance of happening and I like to think I’m a model neighbour.

Even in the unlikely chance of my not winning anything, I will probably be invited – just because it’s me, you understand, and they like me so much – to purchase one of RD’s publications at a knock-down rate. In the past I’ve purchased their road atlas and maybe a couple of other things, knowing this would just make me a mark for further top priority hands-only mailshots. I have always declined their offers of Reader’s Digest Condensed Novels. They would have more luck offering Jamie Oliver a supersize cheeseburger with extra fries, cheap.

Back in my day the prize draw manager was the improbably named Tom Champagne. Nowadays it’s the slightly more plausible, blokey Nick Shelley. There’s even a brief paragraph assuring us he does exist. At least he has a likely-sounding name.

Oh, balls, it’s all so bloody Daily Mail. It’s Hyacinth Bucket. It’s a relic of a time when the middle classes were busting out like never before and craved respectability. The intent was to fool them into thinking they had it. How better to seem respectable than to have rows of condensed classic works of literature lined up on your stone clad bookcase, gleaming in their leather binding with gold embossed text? Sniggering at us? Who’s sniggering?

And they’re still doing it.

The last time I got one of these, I think, I had never heard of (or indeed received) a Nigerian spam. Now it finally dawns on me that these wastes of treeware are Nigerian spam’s only slightly better good twin. Okay, they’re not invitations to criminal activity but they are equally insulting in their own way. Not by a blithe assumption that a large enough sum will induce me to participate in serious fraud; just by thinking that all the bells, whistles, seals, certificates of authenticity, strident letters assuring me I’m through two out of three stages but could fall at the third so don’t delay, act now and the general good simulation of personal attention will actually make me take them one atom more seriously.

Spam makes it money by costing only pennies to hook in one sucker every few million. It’s all they need. I don’t doubt that Reader’s Digest is actually legal and genuine; someone somewhere will be winning that £250,000. But to fund that, and to pay the considerably higher overheads, they must have to sell a lot of condensed novels, and that’s the most depressing thought of all.

Nation and other books

One of the best books I read in 2008, I just managed to squeeze into the year. I finished it about five minutes before the bongs, on the same day its author’s knighthood was announced.

Nation by (Sir) Terry Pratchett could have been a Discworld novel but it wouldn’t pack half the punch it does. It’s more or less set in our world’s nineteenth century, with just enough variance for Pratchett to have fun. But the underlying premise simply isn’t funny and he doesn’t try to pretend it is: the Nation is a Pacific island (one of the Mothering Sunday islands, which are an extension of the Bank Holiday Monday group) whose population is wiped out by a tsunami following a volcanic eruption. Mau is the sole survivor. On the island he meets Daphne (née Ermintrude, but in Pratchett style she chooses a name that better reflects her personality), scion of the aristocracy and related more closely than she realises to royalty, who is the sole survivor of a shipwreck caused by the same tsunami. They both have a great deal of pain to get through. Being Pratchett heroes, of course, they manage; and then you remember the author’s own recent personal tsunami, his diagnosis with Alzheimer’s, and you realise this is Pratchett’s Book of Job.

I hadn’t realised before how well Job works for non-believers as well as believers. I remember Pratchett saying in an interview that he’s a humanist, and therefore an atheist, and either way that unfortunately means he can’t get angry with God because he doesn’t believe in him. Job, and Nation, show that you can still scream WHY? at whoever you do or don’t believe in, and either way you get the same answer: “Because. Who’s asking?”

After all that, don’t get the idea it’s heavy going, because it isn’t. Pratchettism abounds. When you hear a sentence like “it only needs 138 people to die and your father will be King!” then it’s just asking for trouble – the humour equivalent of the gun on the mantelpiece. The platonic love story – Mau and Daphne are still children – is funny and moving, and there are sideways views of science and religion and civilisation and wonderful turns of phrase left, right and centre. One of my favourites was a description of Daphne’s great-great-aunt: “apparently a young man had smiled at her on her twenty-first birthday and she’s gone straight to bed with an attack of the vapours, and stayed there, still gently vaporizing …”

It’s great fun, and it’s also one of the few books I actually feel honoured to have read.

And here’s everything else I read in 2008. In summary, with last year’s figures in brackets:

total: 53 (60)
science fiction/fantasy: 30 (30)
translated from Swedish: 4 (4)
gave up reading: 2

In full:

  • Nation, Terry Pratchett
  • Black & Blue, Ian Rankin
  • The Turing Test, Chris Beckett
  • Enigma, Robert Harris
  • The Big Over Easy, Jasper Fforde
  • Fool Moon, Jim Butcher
  • Storm Front, Jim Butcher
  • Halting State, Charles Stross
  • Anansi Boys, Neil Gaiman
  • Little Brother, Cory Doctorow
  • The Locked Room, Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö
  • Marooned in Real Time, Vernor Vinge
  • The Peace War, Vernor Vinge
  • Jingo, Terry Pratchett
  • Invasive Procedures, Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston
  • The Fountainhead, Ayn Rand
  • Smoke & Mirrors, Neil Gaiman
  • His Majesty’s Dragon, Naomi Novik
  • Coyote Frontier, Allen Steele
  • Coyote Rising, Allen Steele
  • Empire, Orson Scott Card
  • Notes from a Big Country, Bill Bryson
  • The First Rumpole Omnibus, John Mortimer
  • Pied Piper, Nevil Shute
  • Imperium, Robert Harris
  • Wintersmith, Terry Pratchett
  • Saturn’s Children, Charles Stross
  • Keeper of Dreams, Orson Scott Card
  • A Fire Upon the Deep, Vernor Vinge
  • Wife to Charles II, Hilda Lewis
  • Round Ireland with a Fridge, Tony Hawks
  • I Am Legend, Richard Matheson
  • Ireland: Awakening, by Edward Rutherfurd
  • The Great Siege: Malta 1565, Ernle Bradford
  • Snakehead, Anthony Horowitz
  • The Digital Plague, Jeff Somers
  • Simon and the Oaks, Marianne Fredriksson
  • Then and Now, W. Somerset Maugham
  • Leviathan Rising, Jonathan Green
  • Stardust, Neil Gaiman
  • Let the Right One In, John Ajvide Lindqvist
  • Mister Monday, Garth Nix
  • Looking for Jake & Other Stories, China Miéville
  • Rainbows End, Vernor Vinge
  • Causing Chaos with Jeremy James, David Henry Wilson
  • The Queen’s Tiara, CJL Almqvist
  • The Amber Spyglass, Philip Pullman
  • The Subtle Knife, Philip Pullman
  • Frankenstein Unbound, Brian Aldiss
  • The Dilbert Future, Scott Adams
  • Galileo’s Daughter, Dava Sobel
  • My Booky Wook, Russell Brand
  • The Twinkling of an Eye, Brian Aldiss