I got home from a trip to the butcher and grocer to find a parcel at my back door. Baffled, I opened it up and found this delightful package from Landlust. Ignore my slightly untidy kitchen.
Everything Is Better With Dragons
Book blogger, Autistic, Probably a Dragon
I got home from a trip to the butcher and grocer to find a parcel at my back door. Baffled, I opened it up and found this delightful package from Landlust. Ignore my slightly untidy kitchen.
Storks normally migrate in the winter to sub-Saharan Africa, but changes in behaviour have seen them staying in Iberia over winter. More than 14,000 storks are overwintering in Portugal alone, living on open land fill sites just as seagulls do [1]. The have been witnessed waiting for the rubbish trucks and descending on the trucks as they empty
Continue reading “Storks overwintering and living on landfill”
Robbing disabled Peter to pay privileged Paul – http://wp.me/p3HucV-K0k
I have nothing to add, except to reiterate my contempt for the government and bewilderment at the 23% of the electorate that actually voted for these vicious people.
Good evening, a week ago I got a chance to see the film adaptation of the J.G. Ballard’s 1975 novel ‘High-Rise’, directed by Ben Wheatley and starring Tom Hiddleston; an advance preview showing in Sheffield, followed by a Q&A with the director. The screen play was written by Amy Jump.
If you’ve read the book, you’ll know the plot. Dr Robert Laing moves in to a brand new flat in a forty story tower block. Eventually tensions between lower floor residents and the residents of the upper floors turns the block in to a war zone as everyone goes slowly mad.
I loved the book.
I love the film too. There were changes but they didn’t take away from the overall plot. The score, and use of specific songs in different arrangements all the way through the film to suggest continuity from party to party as the residents go quickly mad. The frenetic pace and amazing sets really add to the story. The acting was excellent and actors perfect in their roles.
I was especially pleased that they included the barbecued Alsation scene.
Published by: Abaddon
Publication Date: 8th March 2016
ISBN: 9781781083949
Price: Anywhere from £7.00 for paper back
Edition: Paper back
Published By: Oxford University Press
Publication Date: 1st April 2016
Edition: Paperback
ISBN: 9780190250478
Price: £10.99
Published by: Faber and Faber Ltd.
Publication date: 3rd March 2016
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780571318018
Price: £15.99
Published by: Oxford University Press
Publication Date: 1st June 2016
Edition: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780190275013
Price: £22.99
Continue reading “Review: ‘A World From Dust’ by Ben McFarland”
Since I’m writing about science at the minute it might seem like a good idea to write about the LIGO discovery earlier this week of gravitational waves, the final prediction of Einstein’s 1916 Theory of General Relativity to be confirmed. This could be tricky, I only have a glancing understanding of relativity, I’ll have a go though.
How glow sticks work. It’s quite handy that I happened to write my dissertation, way back in 2003, on the subject of luminescence since that’s what we’re talking about. Unfortunately, I can’t find my dissertation or my OHP slides – yes we were still using overhead projectors at Durham University in the early 2000’s – so I’ve actually had to look things up, mostly Jablonski diagrams. I had a really good one that I used for my dissertation, but like I said, I can’t find them.