Watching Paul Murton follow the River Dee, and thinking some of the Aberdeenshire folk sound awfully like Scottish Borderers! A uni classmate of mine at Dundee used to think my accent sounded as though I was from Brechin or somewhere up there. Nice to hear folk who sound “local” for me anyway. My accent is a mix of Edinburgh like / Borders cross, and a much stronger version which comes out the more puggled I am or if talking to eg my Mum! The Hawick part can come out really strongly then. Plus perhaps an added Somerset twang thanks to 30 years marriage 😜
Journal paper work
Aug. 13th, 2024 04:21 pmPleased to be sitting up, working on an academic journal paper. Filling in more remaining footnotes as I get closer to finished. Latest ones added about Presbyterian minister Archibald Simpson's time in South Carolina, General Staats Long Morris in Aberdeenshire, and Edinburgh Lord Provost Sir James Hunter Blair. All of the above were employers of black servants in late eighteenth century Scotland. I get incredibly frustrated by how little I know about these servants, often not even their names. While the employers are written up at length, often with fancy paintings. Though in the above examples I do know a little about Cloy Simpson, Wattie and Jack Blair Hunter. Yes I have thoughts ...
Cymera blog post
Jul. 15th, 2024 04:21 pmI just wrote up my experience watching masses of Cymera 2024 on streaming.
Cymera 2024 end list
Jul. 14th, 2024 08:41 amI'll be blogging about this properly on my academic musings blog. But I've just finished watching my final catch up videos from the Cymera 2024 Edinburgh festival of fantasy, scifi and horror writing. Here is the list of things I got through - a rather impressive total of 18 events. Rather stunned with that, given how asleep I am constantly, and I have been mainly watching them just before bed at night. And not every night. And usually taking several nights to finish each one! These and other Cymera videos have been available for me to watch online from early June until tonight at midnight.
- From Dr. Who to Star Trek: New Stories with Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson and Una McCormack
- The Power of Books with Gareth Brown and Mark Lawrence
- Eldritch Gods and Other Uninvited Guests with Mark Stay and Charles Stross
- There’s Been A Murder with Amy Goldsmith, T.L. Huchu and Frances White
- Arctic Horrors with C.J. Cooke, Tim Lebbon and Ally Wilkes
- In Search of a New Eden with Oliver Langmead, Ken MacLeod and Adrian Tchaikovsky
- Time Travels with Poppy Kuroki & Nigel Planer
- Cassandra Clare in conversation with V.E. Schwab
- The Pleasures of Reading
- The Secret to a Successful Partnership with Megan Bannen and Gabby Hutchinson Crouch
- Many Shades of Darkness with Elle Nash, Kaaron Warren and Johanna Van Veen
- Creating Legends with Kate Heartfield and Sophie Keetch
- Past, Present, Future with Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson, William Letford and EJ Swift
- Dark Encounters with Em Reed and Lorraine Wilson
- Writing the Future with Rachelle Atalla, Dan Coxon and Una McCormack
- Thrilling Futures with Lauren Beukes, Nikhil Singh and Maud Woolf
- Retellings with Joanne Harris, Lucy Holland and Shona Kinsella
- Unleashing Chaos with Jane Flett and Kelly Link
No (or very little) streaming
Jun. 14th, 2024 11:15 pmFinally going through the printed Edinburgh Book Festival Programme, and hugely disappointed by how few events this year are offering streaming paid tickets. I’ve enjoyed many of their talks remotely in recent years. This feels like a real step back, discriminating against people who can’t attend in person.
On plus, having realised how few of the Edinburgh Book Festival events this year are offering streaming, I can very quickly go through the programme. No need to read all the event listings, looking for those I like. I can just look for the few with a livestream tag under them. Sheesh!
On plus, having realised how few of the Edinburgh Book Festival events this year are offering streaming, I can very quickly go through the programme. No need to read all the event listings, looking for those I like. I can just look for the few with a livestream tag under them. Sheesh!
CYMERA 2024
Jun. 2nd, 2024 12:03 amStarting with my CYMERA festival catchup. This festival of science fiction, fantasy and horror writing is happening in Edinburgh this weekend, but luckily though I can’t go I bought a digital ticket in advance. So I’m just now watching a talk from Saturday morning (Doctor Who and Star Trek content!). Very much up my street!


I've just finished this contemporary fantasy book, a debut publication by a new novelist. Who lives near Edinburgh of all places! I liked a lot about it. It's a combination of a tale of magic books / contemporary fantasy / time travel / thriller and I'd say memoirs in a strange way. But I did have problems, and that's why I've rated it just 3/5 overall.
The plotting is intricate, right through to the very end, and admirable. But I found the mass of characters being introduced early on and the chopping and changing of points of view tricky to keep up with, and hard to stay engaged with. However when it reached about halfway through something happened that was so very clever as writing. I was rather wowed. And then from there it careers towards the finale. Again densely plotted.
Beware it gets very violent in places. Very violent. This is not what I would term a young adult read for that reason. It's closer in some respects to crime fiction in that respect. It also strangely reminded me of the TV scifi series Heroes, with the many protagonists in there. But it was a bit overwhelming to read in book form. Though on plus it's very cinematic, and I could easily imagine this book adapted to a movie version.
However for fans of contemporary fantasy who aren't deterred by violent bits in places I'd recommend this. Just maybe beware going in that it is going to be a bit choppy in narrative, especially earlier on, and you may need to give it more time to get hooked.
I would definitely read another book by the same author, but would prefer one with a fresh plot and concept. I am also looking forward to seeing the author chat about this book at the Cymera book festival in Edinburgh in the summer. I have an online weekend pass for that whole festival, and will be watching - mainly on catchup - with interest.

The plotting is intricate, right through to the very end, and admirable. But I found the mass of characters being introduced early on and the chopping and changing of points of view tricky to keep up with, and hard to stay engaged with. However when it reached about halfway through something happened that was so very clever as writing. I was rather wowed. And then from there it careers towards the finale. Again densely plotted.
Beware it gets very violent in places. Very violent. This is not what I would term a young adult read for that reason. It's closer in some respects to crime fiction in that respect. It also strangely reminded me of the TV scifi series Heroes, with the many protagonists in there. But it was a bit overwhelming to read in book form. Though on plus it's very cinematic, and I could easily imagine this book adapted to a movie version.
However for fans of contemporary fantasy who aren't deterred by violent bits in places I'd recommend this. Just maybe beware going in that it is going to be a bit choppy in narrative, especially earlier on, and you may need to give it more time to get hooked.
I would definitely read another book by the same author, but would prefer one with a fresh plot and concept. I am also looking forward to seeing the author chat about this book at the Cymera book festival in Edinburgh in the summer. I have an online weekend pass for that whole festival, and will be watching - mainly on catchup - with interest.

Cymera 2024
Mar. 1st, 2024 09:55 amJust booked myself an online digital pass (early bird reduced rate) for this summer's Cymera festival of science fiction, fantasy and horror writing. I'd love to be healthy enough to go to it in person in Edinburgh but the online streaming is a great option. Masses of talks.
For anyone else who might be wondering if the Cymera festival ticket price - especially the online option - is worth it, here's what I wrote about my experiences watching it last year. So phenomenally rewarding for me.
For anyone else who might be wondering if the Cymera festival ticket price - especially the online option - is worth it, here's what I wrote about my experiences watching it last year. So phenomenally rewarding for me.
Spoiler free at last (Doctor Who)
Dec. 9th, 2023 08:03 pmFinally been able to show Martin again the Mastermind question in January about Doctor Who that left me reeling, and that he answered correctly then and still didn’t take in key new info! Enjoyed the episode, though didn’t like one element as expected. But yes, feeling very relieved now re spoilers. And I’ve just filled him in on the Edinburgh, Fife, Dundee and Broughty Ferry links of a certain actor.
I will post more in depth thoughts about tonight’s episode later.
I will post more in depth thoughts about tonight’s episode later.
Researching poet lives
Sep. 27th, 2023 02:39 pmI'm finishing off a book review I'm writing for an academic journal. The book is a new collection of Scottish poems in the long 18th century. Each poet's section includes a short biography before one or more poems from them. And I can't help myself constantly researching the poets and their lives more. My big success last night was confirming one poet being baptised in my home town Hawick in 1764. Far more precise than "born in one of the border counties washed by the Tweed" in DNB etc. He had many siblings baptised in Hawick or Wilton, then younger ones in Gala and Edinburgh before the parents moved to Kilmarnock and more baptised there. I should probably write this up as an academic journal paper too, not least to show the possibilities of easily accessed digitised Scottish parish registers to expand on these life stories.
Got through my final two Edinburgh Book Festival 2023 recordings, nicely ahead of the 3AM on 30th September deadline to view them online!
Here are the latest two talks I watched:
Digital tickets are still available for a huge number of 2023 Edinburgh Book Festival events, but you have to watch the recordings by 3AM on this coming Saturday, so time is tight!
Here are the latest two talks I watched:
- Kübra Gümüşy, R F Kuang & Irene Vallejo: A Short History of Language - a fascinating panel discussing language, translation, culture, colonialism and power
- David Greig & Alan Warner: Scottish Legends Retold - two authors of recent novellas set in Scotland in the 9th and 18th centuries, with an insightful discussion about the writing process, historical research, dealing with imposter syndrome and aiming for historical fidelity
Digital tickets are still available for a huge number of 2023 Edinburgh Book Festival events, but you have to watch the recordings by 3AM on this coming Saturday, so time is tight!
Edinburgh Book Festival catchup
Sep. 17th, 2023 10:58 pmRemembered I need to watch the Edinburgh Book Festival recordings I have virtual tickets for before the end of this month. So aiming to get through some this week coming, illness permitting. I think digital tickets can still be bought to watch recordings of these and many other 2023 Edinburgh author talks.


This is mainly a reminder to myself, but may be of use to others to know about these streaming options.
Edinburgh Book Festival offers online streaming access to many of its events. Which can still be booked, even after the events have taken place. You can watch recordings on catchup until the end of September. I have streaming tickets this year for:
This coming week the Tolkien Society's Oxonmoot event will be taking place in Oxford, and again online in hybrid form. I have an online ticket. Will sleep through the live events, but can watch recorded talks over the coming months, probably until nearly Christmas. The Oxonmoot team are really good at getting the streaming technology working well (I've had online tickets for the past few years), and the content is fascinating.
Edinburgh Book Festival offers online streaming access to many of its events. Which can still be booked, even after the events have taken place. You can watch recordings on catchup until the end of September. I have streaming tickets this year for:
- David Greig & Alan Warner: Scottish Legends Retold
- Denise Mina: 15th Century Culture Wars
- Katrín Jakobsdóttir & Ragnar Jónasson: Partners in Crime
- Kübra Gümüşy, R F Kuang & Irene Vallejo: A Short History of Language
This coming week the Tolkien Society's Oxonmoot event will be taking place in Oxford, and again online in hybrid form. I have an online ticket. Will sleep through the live events, but can watch recorded talks over the coming months, probably until nearly Christmas. The Oxonmoot team are really good at getting the streaming technology working well (I've had online tickets for the past few years), and the content is fascinating.
Edinburgh Book Festival
Jul. 30th, 2023 12:34 amBooking my online streaming Edinburgh Book Festival tickets for this year. I could watch the events live online, but will also have until the end of September to watch them on catchup, which is most likely how I’ll watch. Martin is going to watch the Greta Thunberg talk with me. And yes that is the Icelandic Prime Minister speaking about her crime writing career in another one.


I blogged about this on my main personal blog, having just finished viewing all the talks I will watch. I got through 22! All watched online. Phew. Extremely positive experiences.
Catching up with Cymera Festival panels
Jun. 22nd, 2023 08:48 pmThis passed me by before, but this year I was lucky to find out in time about the Cymera festival of fantasy, scifi and horror writing. It takes place in Edinburgh, but in recent years due to Covid has been online too. It took place in early June and I bought a digital weekend pass. This let me watch events streamed live, but more importantly for constantly sleeping me let me also watch after on catchup. I have until 3rd July to watch them, so am now watching as I can. Have already enjoyed Adrian Tchaikovsky and others talk about cityscapes in fantasy fiction, and Aliette de Bodard and Ann Leckie talk about space operas. With many more things still to watch, as much as I can fit in before the deadline. The technology has sometimes been somewhat ropey, but overall I’m getting lots out of it, and am inspired as a reader and writer myself.
Uisge beatha
May. 29th, 2023 10:26 pmThe drawback of reading Iain Banks’s “Raw Spirit” whisky tour book is I now have a very long list of whiskies I want to try! If we ever get back to the Balmoral Hotel in Edinburgh I am going to have to spend a long time - and a lot of money! - in their dedicated whisky bar. It is also marvellous reading more about whisky names I recognise from all the computers at St Andrews Computer Science back in the 1990s 🙂
Buying myself a weekend digital pass to the CYMERA scifi, fantasy and horror writing festival in Edinburgh. I will probably sleep through all the events live, but will be able to catch up over the following weeks. Shame I didn't think of this 2 weeks or more ago, when the early bird rate was still there. But better late than never!
Book 27 of 2022
May. 15th, 2022 04:34 pmI’ve just finished The Library of the Dead by T.L. Huchu, the first in his Edinburgh Nights series of books. This is an occult urban fantasy set in a near-future dystopian version of Edinburgh. The central character Ropa is a Scottish-Zimbabwean young girl, making a living by carrying messages between ghosts and the living. And in the book she gets caught up in way much more.
I enjoyed this a lot. The lead character is sparky and well rounded, and the dystopian version of Edinburgh is well described, and highly original, yet still very much urban fantasy as we know it. The plot zips along nicely, and the reader follows Ropa hunting for missing children, discovering a massive underground occult library, and fighting terrible horrors.
I enjoyed this a lot. The lead character is sparky and well rounded, and the dystopian version of Edinburgh is well described, and highly original, yet still very much urban fantasy as we know it. The plot zips along nicely, and the reader follows Ropa hunting for missing children, discovering a massive underground occult library, and fighting terrible horrors.
Two things brought my score down though. Firstly the underground occult library called out to me masses, but is frustratingly little explored here after its introductions. I gather it will be fleshed out more in the sequel book.
The other thing is that I found the horror in the middle section too unnerving for me to be happy reading. I was happy when that bit had passed! But then I suppose that is to an extent the measure of good writing, to affect the reader.
A strong 3/5 from me, and I will definitely read the sequel.