Round and Round: Why We Can’t Resist a Carousel

There’s something about them. The painted horses bobbing up and down. The wild organ music. The smiling children holding onto the pole with one hand and waving with the other as they go round and round. Carousels sit at the centre of many a fairground, but they also occupy a special place in our memories … Read more

Turning to Crime

I hadn’t planned to turn to crime  when I stopped teaching but, to my surprise, it’s what I ended up doing. Not committing it, you understand, but writing it – something that still, in some people’s eyes, comes to pretty much the same thing. I’m still not exactly sure how this  happened, but I think … Read more

Introducing DI Garibaldi

DI Garibaldi is the non-driving, country-music loving, poetry-quoting detective who makes his fictional debut in The Final Round . How did I create him? Where did he come from? Strangely, the first thing that came was the name – Garibaldi. That’s Garibaldi as in the biscuit and as in the key figure in the unification … Read more

Hanging out on Hydra with Leonard Cohen – Polly Samson’s ‘A Theatre for Dreamers’

  I read ‘A Theatre for Dreamers’ in a couple of sittings, becoming so immersed in its sense of place and time that I almost forgot about the current state of the world. It may have helped that the novel is set in Hydra, a place to which I feel a strong emotional connection, and … Read more

Nick Hornby’s ‘State of The Union’ and The Guardian Crossword

I started watching Nick Hornby’s State of the Union determined to follow the advice of Lucy Mangan in her five-star Guardian review and not binge it all in one sitting.  I failed. Ten ten-minute dramas and  I wolfed the whole lot down without getting up from the table.  I’m sure short-form comedy isn’t meant to … Read more