Police, Poison, and Diamonds

Police, Poison, and Diamonds

Police are to fight crime, and the February edition of Red Herrings, the bulletin of the Crime Writers Association has arrived. As usual there are too many great articles to mention all of them. The first one that caught my attention is called Bad Press for the...

read more
Knight Night

Knight Night

Last night I watched Josh Widdicombe on Who Do You Think You Are? It turned out that he’s descended from both King Edward I of England and King Philip III of France. He may also be descended from Henry VIII and there were knights of the realm on route too. Who knows,...

read more
Destination

Destination

I usually have a destination in mind when I start on a journey. I may have misled some readers with my last post, Writing and Walking. I said that I’d been struggling with the ending of The Favourite Murder, the fifth book in the Sir Anthony Standen Adventures, and...

read more
Walking and Writing

Walking and Writing

Walking and writing seem to go together for me really well. I wrote The Spy who Sank the Armada, the first book of the Sir Anthony Standen Adventures during lockdown. Whenever I got stuck over a scene, I went for a long walk. I hasten to add that this was the part of...

read more
Interview with The Reader’s House

Interview with The Reader’s House

I’ve just been interviewed by The Reader’s House magazine. Apparently it’s the first and only British print magazine available in over 190 countries. It’s available in Barnes & Noble, Waterstones, Blackwells, Amazon and many, many other outlets. My interview is a...

read more
Galileo and Francis Bacon

Galileo and Francis Bacon

Galileo discovered the first three moons of Jupiter on this day in 1610. By a happy coincidence, also on the 7th January, but in 1618, Francis Bacon became Lord Chancellor of England. The happy coincidence is because there is a connection to Sir Anthony Standen, my...

read more
Spreadsheet & Creative Writing

Spreadsheet & Creative Writing

Does a spreadsheet have a role in creative writing? Spreadsheets are for numbers, right? Well I’m using one for my fifth book in the Sir Anthony Standen Adventures, working title, The Favourite Murder. I know it sounds crazy, but let me explain. I’ve posted about the...

read more
Fear, Forbidden Love, & Hatred

Fear, Forbidden Love, & Hatred

Last night Claire and I watched The Greatest Showman for the first time, and thoroughly enjoyed it. I’m sure you all know that it’s the fictionalised, musical biography of P.T. Barnum. At the end there is a quotation by Barnum which reads, “the noblest art is that of...

read more
Boxing Day

Boxing Day

Boxing Day seems to be a day when a lot happens. King Lear was first performed on this day in 1606 for king James I. I’m not a fan of King James. He had my ancestor Sir Anthony Standen imprisoned in the Tower of London. You can read all about it in The Spy who Sank...

read more
Police, Poison, and Diamonds

Police, Poison, and Diamonds

Police are to fight crime, and the February edition of Red Herrings, the bulletin of the Crime Writers Association has arrived. As usual there are too many great articles to mention all of them. The first one that caught my attention is called Bad Press for the...

read more
Knight Night

Knight Night

Last night I watched Josh Widdicombe on Who Do You Think You Are? It turned out that he’s descended from both King Edward I of England and King Philip III of France. He may also be descended from Henry VIII and there were knights of the realm on route too. Who knows,...

read more
Destination

Destination

I usually have a destination in mind when I start on a journey. I may have misled some readers with my last post, Writing and Walking. I said that I’d been struggling with the ending of The Favourite Murder, the fifth book in the Sir Anthony Standen Adventures, and...

read more
Walking and Writing

Walking and Writing

Walking and writing seem to go together for me really well. I wrote The Spy who Sank the Armada, the first book of the Sir Anthony Standen Adventures during lockdown. Whenever I got stuck over a scene, I went for a long walk. I hasten to add that this was the part of...

read more
Interview with The Reader’s House

Interview with The Reader’s House

I’ve just been interviewed by The Reader’s House magazine. Apparently it’s the first and only British print magazine available in over 190 countries. It’s available in Barnes & Noble, Waterstones, Blackwells, Amazon and many, many other outlets. My interview is a...

read more
Galileo and Francis Bacon

Galileo and Francis Bacon

Galileo discovered the first three moons of Jupiter on this day in 1610. By a happy coincidence, also on the 7th January, but in 1618, Francis Bacon became Lord Chancellor of England. The happy coincidence is because there is a connection to Sir Anthony Standen, my...

read more
Spreadsheet & Creative Writing

Spreadsheet & Creative Writing

Does a spreadsheet have a role in creative writing? Spreadsheets are for numbers, right? Well I’m using one for my fifth book in the Sir Anthony Standen Adventures, working title, The Favourite Murder. I know it sounds crazy, but let me explain. I’ve posted about the...

read more
Fear, Forbidden Love, & Hatred

Fear, Forbidden Love, & Hatred

Last night Claire and I watched The Greatest Showman for the first time, and thoroughly enjoyed it. I’m sure you all know that it’s the fictionalised, musical biography of P.T. Barnum. At the end there is a quotation by Barnum which reads, “the noblest art is that of...

read more
Boxing Day

Boxing Day

Boxing Day seems to be a day when a lot happens. King Lear was first performed on this day in 1606 for king James I. I’m not a fan of King James. He had my ancestor Sir Anthony Standen imprisoned in the Tower of London. You can read all about it in The Spy who Sank...

read more