Whoniversaries 23 September

i) births and deaths

23 September 1949: birth of Floella Benjamin (now Baroness Benjamin of Beckenham) who played the recurring character Professor Rivers in the first three seasons of the Sarah Jane Adventures.

23 September 1959: birth of Frank Cottrell Boyce, who wrote In the Forest of the Night (Twelfth Doctor, 2014) and Smile (Twelfth Doctor, 2017). (And much ese, including the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony.)

ii) broadcast anniversaries

23 September 1967: broadcast of fourth episode of Tomb of the Cybermen. The Cybermen kill Kaftan; Toberman helps the others to freeze the Cybermen again, at the cost of his own life.

23 September 1978: broadcast of fourth episode of The Ribos Operation. The Doctor is rescued by the shrivenzale, blows up the Graff, and converts the jethrik into the first segment of the Key to Time.

Apologies by the way for yesterday’s entry, which I did not finish editing before it was posted.

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Bruges-la-morte, by Georges Rodenbach

Second paragraph of third chapter:

Lorsqu’il allait, en de muettes dévotions, baiser la relique de la chevelure conservée ou s’attendrir devant quelque portrait, ce n’est plus avec la morte qu’il confrontait l’image, mais avec la vivante qui lui ressemblait. Mystérieuse identification de ces deux visages. Ç’avait été comme une pitié du sort offrant des points de repère à sa mémoire, se mettant de connivence avec lui contre l’oubli, substituant une estampe fraîche à celle qui pâlissait, déjà jaunie et piquée par le temps. When he went to perform his silent devotions, kissing the relic of her hair or giving rein to his emotions before some portrait, it was no longer his dead wife to whom he related the image, but the living woman who resembled her. Mysterious conformity of these two faces! It was as if fate had taken pity on him, providing his memory with markers, conspiring with him against oblivion, substituting a crisp new print for the one that was fading, already yellowed and mildewed with age.

In preparation for our trip to Bruges and parts west last week, I read this very short 1892 novel, which is described by those who know about this things as one of the taproot texts of Symbolism. I am afraid that I thought it was rather silly. The protagonist, recently widowed, takes an actress with an uncanny resemblace to his dead wife as his sugar baby; eventually there comes a point where he realises that his new lover is in fact her own person, and he strangles her with a lock of his dead wife's hair. (Sorry for the spoiler, but the book has been around for a century and a quarter.) The symbolism of the dead town and its dead rituals is belaboured well beyond the point you would have thoguht possible. The French original (which you can read here) was illustrated with some very nice contemporary photographs of Bruges, supposedly the first novel to have this feature (and there can't be many). My translation, with introduction by Alan Hollinghurst and also an essay by Rodenbach on "The Death Throes of Towns", unwisely has chosen to update the photographs with pictures from the present day. But you can get it here.

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Whoniversaries 22 September

i) births and deaths

22 September 1937: birth of Tony Caunter

22 September 1944: birth of Fraser Hines, who played Jamie from 1966 to 1969, and has appeared in more Doctor Who episodes than anyone except the first four Doctors.

22 September 1982: birth of Billie Piper, who played Rose in the first two series of New Who (2005-06) and reappeared in 2008, 2010 and 2013; has appeared in more New Who episodes than anyone except David Tennant.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

22 September 1979: broadcast of fourth episode of Destiny of the Daleks. The Doctor defeats first the Movellans and then the Daleks, and Davros is captured and taken away for trial.

iii) date specified in canon

22 September 1960: birth of Tegan Jovanka, as revealed in the 2006 Big Finish adventure The Gathering.

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Jerusalem, by Alan Moore

Second paragraph of third chapter of Book One: The Boroughs:

He could remember how he’d got out of the life, the business, the proverbial ‘Twenty-five Thousand Nights’, as he’d heard it referred to. Far as Freddy was concerned, it might have happened yesterday. He’d been under the arches down Foot Meadow, sleeping out the way he did back then, when he’d been woke up sudden. It was like he’d heard a bang that woke him up, or like he’d just remembered there was something that was happening that morning that he’d better be alert for. He’d just come awake with such a start that he’d got to his feet and he was walking out from underneath the railway arches and across the grass towards the riverside before he knew what he was doing. Halfway to the river it was like he’d woken properly enough to think, hang on, what am I jumping up like this for? He’d stopped in his tracks and turned around to look back at the arches where he saw another tramp, an old boy, had already nicked his place where he’d been kipping, on the earth below the curve of brickwork up against one wall, had even nicked the plastic carrier bag of grass that had been Freddy’s pillow. It was bloody typical. He’d walked back a few steps towards the archway so that he could see just who the bugger was, so that he’d know him later. It had taken Fred a minute before he could recognise the nasty-looking piece of work, but once he had he knew he’d never get his spot back now. There was no point in even trying. He’d been moved on, and he’d have to just get used to it.

Second paragraph of third chapter of Book Two: Mansoul:

They trespassed upon babies’ dreams and took short cuts across the thoughts of writers, were the inspiration and ideal for every secret club and Children’s Film Foundation mystery, for all the books, for every Stealthy Seven, every Fearless Five. They were the mould; they were the model with their spit oaths and their tramp marks, their precarious dens and their initiation tests, which were notoriously tough: you had to have been buried or cremated before you could join the Dead Dead Gang.

Second paragraph of third chapter of Book Three: Vernall’s Inquest:

Spoonin’ the tousled egg into her scrambled head she wells, as iffer, on the past now. Sadly hatched in Triste at seven past the century and seven past the year, born to the clench and stamour of a paupoise warld, she was denied the mummer’s teatre. Not a dripple Nora drop was she aloud. The molcow was sucked dry, by George, who went from one mamm to an udder all of his serpenitentine life. Eve’n the girden of her garlhood he had snaken from her, eden then, with him the dirty apple of their Mermaw’s eye and allwas raising cain, which Lucia had resistered for as long as she was abel. He’d been furteen, shy was only ten, to pet it baldly. Wristling under milky and transluciant sheets in a suck-session of clamped, crusterphobic rended rooms, the da off summerwhere with all his righting and the mudder rural, pagan in her unconcern, forever standing pisspots on the parlour table where they lifft their venerable beaded halos on the varnish. Giorgio’s dragon would rear up, out from the scampy wondergrowth and orgiantly demanding her at-ten shuns while their Moider only smirled, ingently dull, and let her borther press a head with his idventure, up into the little light, the little depth.

I have not been to Northampton since 1985, when I worked for two months on an archæology site in nearby Raunds. It did not seem to me a strong candidate for hosting a complex mythic geography. However I’m very sympathetic to exploring the dinnseanchas of a particular place – Bryan Talbot has done it for Sunderland, Ciaran Carson for Belfast. The three books have differing formats: the first is a sequence of purely historical vignettes, most connected to the characters who will appear later; the second is a connected narative about one boy’s adventures in the afterlife, very much tied to the streets of the town as they developed historically; and the third unfolds again into a less sequential collection of vignettes, most of which have a mystical element.

The writing is dense and I found it slow going, and also I regretted that the map of Northampton at the front of each book is printed across two pages, so that important details get lost in the central crease. The third chapter of Book Three, “Round The Bend”, is particularly tough going, adopting the style of James Joyce to tell a story about his daughter Lucia who spent the last thirty years of her life in Northampton’s mental hospital; here I basically put down my paper copy of the book and read the text and explanations at this fan site, without which I think I might have given up. (Other inmates at the hospital included the composer Malcolm Arnold, the poet John Clare, and Violet Gibson who shot Mussolini in 1926, but did not kill him.)

Anyway, it’s an ambitious and mesmerising piece of work, pulling together a vast amount of information and imagination. There are some nice emotional bits in there as well, particularly at key moments of the story of the Vernall family whose narrative is at the core of the book. I do think it could have been shorter and tighter (it’s almost 1300 pages in length). But I can now at least wear my badge with pride. You can get it here.

This was my top unread book acquired in 2016. Next on that pile is This Must be the Place by Maggie O’Farrell.

My tweets

  • Sun, 12:56: RT @felixmlarkin: This by ⁦@FrankmcnallyIT⁩ made me laugh out loud over breakfast. And we all need a laugh in Dublin today! https://t.co/Zh
  • Sun, 13:48: “The government may have the brute power to seek to make the governed comply with the law but not the legitimacy to insist. That is quite a loss for any government. And that is what was thrown out of the car window on that journey back from Barnard Castle.” https://t.co/fWYMbqhlAY
  • Sun, 14:48: RT @vanitaguptaCR: “I want you to use my words against me. If there’s a Republican president in 2016 and a vacancy occurs in the last year…
  • Sun, 15:38: The Secret in Vault 13 and The Maze of Doom, by David Solomons https://t.co/N3kdvBbIez
  • Sun, 16:05: Boris Johnson ‘worried his �150,000 salary isn’t enough’ https://t.co/nJkmY0UJu3 Diddums.
  • Sun, 18:54: This is really sad news. David Cook was a great man and we’d had some really good conversations in recent years. Warm hugs to his family. (The first person who I knew at all well who has lost their life to the pandemic. Alas, likely not the last.) https://t.co/ak2dvbYKZ3
  • Sun, 18:57: RT @EamonnMallie: #LordMayor…I loved how self-deprecatory David Cook could be. Having lost yet another election I’d bump into him and his…
  • Sun, 18:57: RT @AlderdiceLord: Very sad to learn of David Cook’s death. He was a great colleague and a very fine man who did such a lot for Alliance a…
  • Sun, 18:57: RT @naomi_long: So sorry to learn of the passing of David Cook, founder member of Alliance and former Lord Mayor of Belfast. Thoughts are w…
  • Sun, 20:48: (PDF) The Death of Michael Collins: Who Pulled the Trigger? | Denis Lenihan – https://t.co/XyawKgutsz https://t.co/vRadZ6nNvV Fascinating analysis, concluding that we cannot know for sure.

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Whoniversaries 21 September

i) births and deaths

21 September 1960: birth of Sue Vertue, producer of The Curse of Fatal Death, daughter of Terry Nation's agent Beryl Vertue and married to later Who show-runner Stephen Moffatt.

21 September 2010: death of Geoffrey Burgon, who composed the memorable incidental music for Terror of the Zygons and The Seeds of Doom, and also the music for Monty Python's Life of Brian and much else besides. For his birthday I linked to the Terror of the Zygons music; here's The Seeds of Doom.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

21 September 1968: broadcast of second episode of The Mind Robber. Jamie turns into someone else with the same name; team Tardis meet Lemuel Gulliver and end up being charged by a unicorn.

21 September 1986: broadcast of third episode of Time and the Rani. Yet more running around with the Doctor ending up plugged into the machine which will drain his brain.


iii) date specified in-universe

21 September 2360: The Doctor's first, or maybe also last, date with River Song.


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The Secret in Vault 13 and The Maze of Doom, by David Solomons

Not so much bookblogging here recently because I've been in a couple of big long reading projects, all of which are now concluded. So I'll be filling in the gaps over the next few days. Here are two Thirteenth Doctor novels by the same writer, set shortly after the first series of Thirteen Doctor TV stories.

The Secret in Vault 13

Second paragraph of third chapter:

Graham was packing a case for the upcoming holiday and singing along to a playlist of seventies classics, which was being piped into the room by the TARDIS's rather fabulous – when it worked – sound system.

This is rather fun. It's a book of two halves: first of all the Doctor and friends discover the mysteries of the Galactic Seed Vault, and then they have to run about collecting the keys to open it (à la Marinus or Key To Time). Lots of continuity references for us old schoolers to spot. Written for a younger audience. You can get it here.

The Maze of Doom

Second paragraph of third chapter:

'Cool,' said Ryan, noting the top message on the display. 'I'm due five upgrades.'

Of all stories from the classic era, I had not really expected The Horns of Nimon to provide material for a New Who novel. (Bearing in mind that even The Smugglers got a sort-of sequel in The Curse of the Black Spot.) Much adventuring for our team in a secret Mediterranean base where dire things are being plotted for humanity and particularly for poor Ryan. Great fun again, not very deep. You can get it here.

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Whoniversaries 20 September

i) births and deaths

20 September 1921: birth of Jack Kine, visual effects designer whose photograph is used on screen for the facist leader of the parallel Britain in Inferno (Third Doctor, 1970).

20 September 1925: birth of John Wiles, innovative producer who succeeded Verity Lambert but did not last long in 1965-66.

Also 20 September 1925: birth of Christopher Barry, who directed nine and a half stories from the first four Doctors between 1963 and 1980.

20 September 1969: birth of Mina Anwar who played Rani's mother Gita in the Sarah Jane Adventures. and also appeared as Goodthing in Smile (Twelfth Doctor, 2017).

20 September 1986: death of Dennis Spooner, script editor in 1965 and author of The Reign of Terror (First Doctor, 1964), The Romans (First Doctor, 1965), The Time Meddler (First Doctor, 1965), much of The Daleks' Master Plan (First Doctor, 1965-6) and the first episode of The Power of the Daleks (Second Doctor, 1966).

20 September 2000: death of Mary Ridge, who directed Terminus (Fifth Doctor, 1983)

ii) broadcast anniversaries

20 September 1975: broadcast of fourth episode of Terror of the Zygons. The Doctor foils the Zygons' attempt to attack London with the Loch Ness Monster, and Harry stays behind on Earth.

20 September 1980: broadcast of fourth episode of The Leisure Hive. Pangol attempts to create an army of dupicates of himself, but the Doctor and Romana regress him to infancy, and depart.

20 September 1986: broadcast of third episode of The Mysterious Planet (ToaTL #3). The Doctor and Peri continue being chased around the mysterious planet, now revealed to be Earth.

20 September 1989: broadcast of the third episode of Battlefield. The grand battle between UNIT and Mordred's forces, though this turns out to have been a diversion.

20 September 2015: broadcast of Time Heist. The Doctor and Clara find that they are robbing a maximum security bank, but why?

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The Deer Hunter

The Deer Hunter won the Oscar for Best Picture of 1978, and won four others, Best Picture, Best Director (Michael Cimino), Best Supporting Actor (Christopher Walken), Best Sound, and Best Film Editing. Robert de Niro and Meryl Streep lost as Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress, and it also lost Best Original Screenplay and Best Cinematography.

The other films up for Best Picture were Coming Home, Heaven Can Wait, Midnight Express and An Unmarried WomanThe Deer Hunter top film of 1978 on one ranking and fourth on the other. The other films from that year that I have seen are Grease, Superman (which won the Hugo, so I’ll come to it next), the Ralph Bakshi animated Lord of the Rings, Watership Down, The Wild Geese and Revenge of the Pink Panther – an interesting selection, of which Grease has somehow worn the years more lightly than the rest. Here’s a trailer for The Deer Hunter:

It’s the story of three friends from a Pennsylvania steel town, who all go to fight in Vietnam and all have their lives fundamentally changed by the war. I had seen it once before, on late night TV as a teenager (the BBC showed it on New Year’s Day 1985), and read the (rather flat) novelisation a couple of years ago. I have to say I found it a mixed bag rather than a masterpiece, also on the long side (more than three hours, ninth in order of length) and I’m putting it a bit more than half way down my list, between two other blue-collar films, Rocky and Marty.

Returning actors from previous Oscar-winning films: John Cazale is the friend who doesn’t go to war here, having been Fredo Corleone in both Godfather films. I was really struck by the brittle and slightly desperate energy he displays in his early scenes here, a step up from Fredo. Reading up on the film, I discovered that he knew he was dying when The Deer Hunter was filmed, and did not live to see the final product.

We saw Robert de Niro, playing Mike here, in the second Godfather film as the young version of Don Corleone.

I know it has nothing to do with the film, but here’s Bananarama celebrating Robert de Niro:

And Christopher Walken, who plays the tragic Nick here, was creepy Duane last year in Annie Hall.

OK, while we’re on classic music videos, here is Christopher Walken’s performance in Fatboy Slim’s Weapon of Choice:

So, what did I not like about the film? It’s too long, as noted above. The violence is graphic, and I find that difficult to watch – not just the war scenes, but I’m not a big fan of hunting for sport. It’s also hugely racist. It’s a story about white people being damaged by Asian people, with no interrogation of what the Asian people might actually think or what the Americans are doing in someone else’s country in the first place. The Vietnamese are all either evil men or sex workers. (The French guy is evil too.) Even in the scenes set in the USA, there are no speaking black characters (one or two extras in the background). It is far too unbalanced for me to enjoy very much.

A peculiar annoyance – is it just me? – is that the lovely John Williams track “Cavatina” seems to me completely mismatched in tone to the actual film.

So, I have to admit that in general the film looks very good and convincing. It shouldn’t work – the Pennsylvania scenes are mostly filmed in Ohio, West Virgnia and the Rockies, and the Vietnamese scenes in Thailand – but it does. It’s amusing to note that the Vietnamese river scenes were filmed on the real River Kwai in Thailand, whereas Bridge on the River Kwai was filmed in Sri Lanka. All the crowd scenes are particularly effective – the wedding, the crowded Vietnamese bars, the desperate last days of Saigon. The hospital scene where Mike finds Steve is gut-wrenching.

I’ve noted John Cazale’s performance above; Christopher Walken and Robert de Niro are also utterly compelling, and so is Meryl Streep, who apparently wrote most of her own lines on top of dealing with Cazale’s terminal illness.

De Niro.png

Anyway, a mixed bag for me. I guess this was a much rawer topic in 1978, only a few years after the end of the war in real life (and indeed real news footage is used at one point), and Cimino managed to tickle the Academy voters as they wanted to be tickled (the lore of the film includes his successful efforts to manipulate the process). But this was one of the films that has not really lasted.

Next up in this sequence, Kramer vs Kramer.

Winners of the Oscar for Best Picture

1920s: Wings (1927-28) | The Broadway Melody (1928-29)
1930s: All Quiet on the Western Front (1929-30) | Cimarron (1930-31) | Grand Hotel (1931-32) | Cavalcade (1932-33) | It Happened One Night (1934) | Mutiny on the Bounty (1935, and books) | The Great Ziegfeld (1936) | The Life of Emile Zola (1937) | You Can’t Take It with You (1938) | Gone with the Wind (1939, and book)
1940s: Rebecca (1940) | How Green Was My Valley (1941) | Mrs. Miniver (1942) | Casablanca (1943) | Going My Way (1944) | The Lost Weekend (1945) | The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) | Gentleman’s Agreement (1947) | Hamlet (1948) | All the King’s Men (1949)
1950s: All About Eve (1950) | An American in Paris (1951) | The Greatest Show on Earth (1952) | From Here to Eternity (1953) | On The Waterfront (1954, and book) | Marty (1955) | Around the World in 80 Days (1956) | The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) | Gigi (1958) | Ben-Hur (1959)
1960s: The Apartment (1960) | West Side Story (1961) | Lawrence of Arabia (1962) | Tom Jones (1963) | My Fair Lady (1964) | The Sound of Music (1965) | A Man for All Seasons (1966) | In the Heat of the Night (1967) | Oliver! (1968) | Midnight Cowboy (1969)
1970s: Patton (1970) | The French Connection (1971) | The Godfather (1972) | The Sting (1973) | The Godfather, Part II (1974) | One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) | Rocky (1976) | Annie Hall (1977) | The Deer Hunter (1978) | Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)
1980s: Ordinary People (1980) | Chariots of Fire (1981) | Gandhi (1982) | Terms of Endearment (1983) | Amadeus (1984) | Out of Africa (1985) | Platoon (1986) | The Last Emperor (1987) | Rain Man (1988) | Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
1990s: Dances With Wolves (1990) | The Silence of the Lambs (1991) | Unforgiven (1992) | Schindler’s List (1993) | Forrest Gump (1994) | Braveheart (1995) | The English Patient (1996) | Titanic (1997) | Shakespeare in Love (1998) | American Beauty (1999)
21st century: Gladiator (2000) | A Beautiful Mind (2001) | Chicago (2002) | The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) | Million Dollar Baby (2004, and book) | Crash (2005) | The Departed (2006) | No Country for Old Men (2007) | Slumdog Millionaire (2008) | The Hurt Locker (2009)
2010s: The King’s Speech (2010) | The Artist (2011) | Argo (2012) | 12 Years a Slave (2013) | Birdman (2014) | Spotlight (2015) | Moonlight (2016) | The Shape of Water (2017) | Green Book (2018) | Parasite (2019)
2020s: Nomadland (2020) | CODA (2021) | Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022) | Oppenheimer (2023)

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Whoniversaries 19 September

i) births and deaths

19 September 1925: birth of Dallas Cavell, who played the road works overseer in the story we now call The Reign of Terror (First Doctor, 1964), Bors in the story we now call The Daleks' Master Plan (First Doctor, 1965), Trask in The Highlanders (Second Doctor, 1966-67), Sir James Quinlan in The Ambassadors of Death (Third Doctor, 1970) and the head of security at the radio telescope in Castrovalva (Fifth Doctor, 1982), getting steadily less hairy as the years went on..

19 September 1940: birth of Caroline John, who played Liz Shaw, the Third Doctor's companion in 1970.

ii) broadcast anniversary

19 September 2015: The Magician's Apprentice kicks off the ninth series of New Who, bringing back Davros and introducing Missy. And the Doctor plays the guitar.

iii) date specified in canon

19 September 1835: The Sixth Doctor and Evelyn encounter Charles Darwin and the Silurians on the Galapagos Islands (in Bloodtide, a 2001 Big Finish audio – one of their best, IMHO).

19 September 1981: possible birthdate of Toshiko Sato (Torchwood).

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February 2008 books

February 2008 began with a really glorious moment as Iain Banks visited Brussels to speak at Scotland House – which occupies the top two floors of the building that my office was then located in. I went to Geneva for what was then my regular gig at GCSP, and Anne and I had a rare romantic getaway weekend in Rome. I wrote blog posts on the Lisbon Treaty and the genetics of blue eyes. Kosovo declared independence and the Greek Cypriot leader lost his re-election bid (and died soon after). At work, my Danish intern V left (she has now founded her own NGO, fighting for gender equality) and was replaced by American D, one of the real stars who I recruited in my eight years at that job (and they were all good).

I managed to read 20 books that month:

non-fiction 5 (YTD 7)
Oxford Take Off In Russian
Algernon, Charlie, and I: A Writer's Journey, by Daniel Keyes
The Time Out Guide to Rome
Dublin Castle and the 1916 Rising: The Story of Sir Matthew Nathan, by Leon Ó Broin
The Megalithic European: The 21st Century Traveller in Prehistoric Europe, by Julian Cope

non-genre 1 (YTD 2)
No Great Mischief, by Alistair MacLeod

script 1
Improbable Frequency, by Arthur Riordan and Bell Helicopter (Conor Kelly and Sam Park)

sf 6 (YTD 11)
The Atrocity Archives, by Charles Stross
The Rediscovery of Man, by Cordwainer Smith
Naked to the Stars, by Gordon R. Dickson
Interzone: The 5th Anthology, edited by John Clute, Lee Montgomerie and David Pringle
Matter, by Iain M. Banks
Humility Garden, by Felicity Savage

Doctor Who 7 (YTD 9)
The Year of Intelligent Tigers, by Kate Orman
Invasion of the Bane, by Terrance Dicks
Revenge of the Slitheen, by Rupert Laight
Eye of the Gorgon, by Phil Ford
Warriors of Kudlak, by Gary Russell

The Glittering Storm, by Shaun Lyon
The Thirteenth Stone, by Justin Richards

4,800 pages (YTD 8,900) not counting the two audiobooks
4/20 (YTD 8/31) by women, though I have no information about the authors of Oxford Take Off In Russian or The Time Out Guide to Rome
None so far this year by PoC, subject to the same caveat.

Four of these to particularly recommend: Improbable Frequency, a play about Schrödinger set in Dublin, which you can get hereAlgernon, Charlie, and I: A Writer's Journey, the story of the classic sf story/book, which you can get hereNo Great Mischief, a lovely Scottish Canadian novel, which you can get hereThe Megalithic European, which ticked my archæological boxes, and you can get it here.

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Whoniversaries 18 September: Gary Russell, Galaxy 4 #3, Masque of Mandragora #3

i) births and deaths

18 September 1931: birth of Terence Woodfield, who appeared in two different First Doctor stories in 1966: as Celation in the story we now call The Daleks' Master Plan, and as Maharis in the story we now call The Ark.

18 September 1963: birth of Gary Russell, former editor of Doctor Who Magazine, former producer at Big Finish, author of twelve Doctor Who novels (counting the book-of-the-movie) and of various other related books, script editor for The Waters of Mars and The End of Time, and director of the two Tenth Doctor animated stories.

18 September 2015: Webcast of Incoming Transmission, a prequel for the Youtubed Fan Show starring Dan Starkey as a new incarnation of Co-ordinator Engin.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

18 September 1965: broadcast of "Trap of Steel", the third episode of the series we now call Galaxy 4. The Drahvins hold Steven hostage while the Doctor and Vicki are sent to explore the Rills' ship; and Vicki is horrified when she actually sees one.

18 September 1976: broadcast of third episode of The Masque of Mandragora. Sarah is hypnotised and attempts to stab the Doctor; the Mandragora Helix gathers power.


iii) date specified in-universe

18 September 1945: Albert Einstein is accidentally transported onto the Tardis and briefly turned into an Ood. (Death is the Only Answer, 2011)

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Public art in Ostende: repression and resistance

A fascinating juxtaposition of public art can be seen in Ostende, which we visited briefly on Sunday. Notoriously, an equestrian statue of King Leopold II (1835-1909, ruled 1865-1909) dominates the Royal Galleries along the seafront.

What makes this particularly gruesome is the tableau of naked Congolese on the left, along with a pith-helmetted Belgian liberator. Given what was actually going on in the Congo under Leopold's personal rule, it's a stomach-churning display. (On the right, a group of Ostenders give thanks to the king for his patronage of their resort.)

Obviously with recent events, the removal of the statuary is being actively discussed. It would not be a straightforward enterprise. It's big and chunky and not easy to surround and bring down by superior force. Where there is a will, there's a way, of course, and I wouldn't be surprised to discover that it has been moved to a museum next time I am in Ostende.

Only a few hundred metres away is this striking declaration:

It’s a work of visual poetry by the Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, written for what he calls “the year of the corrupted plebiscites”, ie 2016, when we had the Brexit referendum and the Trump election. It’s an intriguing statement of aspiration. I’m actually struggling to think of cities, let alone countries, built on graceful promontories. And the notion that good literature will ignore the past is something I struggle with. But it made me think, which I guess is the point.

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Thursday reading

Current
Titus Groan, by Mervyn Peake
The Mirror and the Light, by Hilary Mantel
Distraction, by Bruce Sterling

Last books finished
Bruges-La-Morte, by Georges Rodenbach
An Inland Voyage, by Robert Louis Stevenson
Isabelle, by Jean-Claude Servais
Shadow Scale, by Rachel Hartman

Next books
East West Street, by Philippe Sands
Chronin Volume 1: The Knife at Your Back, by Alison Wilgus

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Whoniversaries 17 September: Peter Stephens, Smugglers #3, Horror #3, Paradise #4

i) births and deaths

17 September 1931: birth of Ian Fairbairn, who played Questor in The Macra Terror (Second Doctor, 1967), Mark Gregory in The Invasion (Second Doctor, 1968), both John Bromleys in Inferno (Third Doctor, 1970) and Chester in The Seeds of Doom (Fourth Doctor, 1976).

17 September 1957: birth of Graeme Curry, who wrote The Happiness Patrol (Seventh Doctor, 1988)

17 September 1972: death of Peter Stephens, who played Cyril, the Kitchen Boy, and the Knave of Hearts in The Celestial Toymaker (First Doctor, 1966), and Lolem the high priest in The Underwater Menace (Second Doctor, 1967).

17 September 2010: death of Louis Marks, author of Planet of Giants (First Doctor, 1964), Day of the Daleks (Third Doctor, 1972), Planet of Evil (Fourth Doctor, 1975) and The Masque of Mandragora (Fourth Doctor, 1976).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

17 September 1966: broadcast of third episode of The Smugglers. Ben and Polly use witchcraft to escape the villagers, but are recaptured; the Doctor fails to escape the pirates. I should have mentioned previously that Elroy Josephs, as Jamaica, is the first Afro-Caribbean actor to have a speaking role on Doctor Who.

17 September 1977: broadcast of third episode of Horror of Fang Rock. People start dying; Reuben starts glowing; and the Doctor admits to Leela that he has locked the enemy in rather than out.

17 September 1993: broadcast of fourth episode of The Paradise of Death on BBC radio. Some very weird stuff with tame giant bats.

17 September 2011: broadcast of The God Complex. The Eleventh Doctor, Amy and Rory explore a hotel with some very odd residents.

iii) date specified in-universe

17 September 2016: the Level Two Careers Fair takes place at Coal Hill School, as seen in 2016 Class episodes For Tonight We Might Die and Co-Owner of a Lonely Heart.

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Ypres, Flanders Fields and my great-uncle’s grave

We spent one day of our trip out west in and around Ypres, where the grand Cloth Hall, reconstructed after 1918, houses the moving and thorough In Flanders Fields Museum, chronicling the experiences of the first world war. It took us about an hour and a half to walk through.

Just outside the church is a memorial to the Munsters:

The battlefields are all concentrated in a very small area – just a few kilometres separate Ypres from Passendaele; halfway between is Tyne Cot, the largest of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s cemeteries worldwide, with an unimaginable 16,000 buried there, many without identification.

Those whose resting place is not known are commemorated on the Menin Gate, a short walk from the centre of Ypres.

Over the summer I’ve been doing a lot of research into family history, and discovered that one of my (many) great-uncles is buried just across the French border in Bailleul. Tracking down the CWGC part of the municipal cemetery there was not straightforward; it is very far from the entrance, through the tangle of entombed local noteworthies.

We forget that the Allied forces of the day were actually fairly multicultural:

We struggled to find my great-uncle among the 4,000 Allied (and some German) casualties at Bailleul. One thing we did notice was that very few of the graves were marked as unidentified – Bailleul had been the site of a field hospital, which I guess meant that when you died there, they knew who you were. Luckily M. Kapenowski, himself a veteran and chronicler of his town’s contribution to history, was there and able to guide us.

And, in a row of early Allied graves just outside the main CWGC field, we found him.

My grandfather and all three of his living brothers also fought in the first world war; so did their oldest nephew, who was killed at Gallipoli, where my grandfather was wounded. I confess that I was barely aware of Captain Corbally’s existence until a few months ago. He had four children, aged between two and seven when he died, who were among my father’s many first cousins; I only remember meeting one of them. An obituary says,

He was educated first at the Oratory School, from which he went to Stonyhurst. He served through the Boer War in the Dublin Yeomanry, and was taken prisoner at Lindley. For his services he received the Queen’s medal. He was a member of the Stock Exchange, and was engaged there, and also in the management of some special business for Messrs. Brunner, Mond and Co. when war broke out in August, 1914. He then rejoined the Army, and received a commission, as Temporary Captain, in the Royal Field Artillery in September, 1914. Captain Corbally was severely wounded in action near Ypres, and died in hospital at Hazebrouck on the 6th May, 1915.

Captain Corbally married, in 1906, Nancy, daughter of J.J. Whyte, D.L., of Loughbrickland, Co. Down, and left four children. He was a very interesting speaker, and impressed one as a shrewd judge of men and things. As a business man his abilities were recognised in influential quarters, and he had been employed latterly on some highly paid special work by firms representing very wide interests. He possessed a very ready pen, and had made a successful trial of journalism before he took to financial work, and even then he still contributed articles on subjects which interested him. He was a keen sportsman and a good game shot with the rifle and sporting gun, but his favourite recreation was angling, on which subject he would discourse most entertainingly with kindred spirits.

Another source adds:

Our position was on the railway about 4 miles N.E. of Ypres, and it was going back to see the first line about ½ a mile along the line that the shelling took place.

That must have been pretty close to the location of Tyne Cot cemetery today. The regimental war diary records that he was wounded on 1 May, and died in hospital on the 6th.

His two sons both had military careers – the older, Pat, was in the Royal Ulster Rifles, retiring with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in 1954; the younger, Teddy, rose to Air Vice Marshal, retiring in 1959. There were two daughters as well, Biddy and Molly. Pat is the only one I remember meeting; he had a wooden leg, which seemed pretty exotic to me as a boy. I feel a lot closer to them now.

It is a bit frustrating that although family records are clear that his first name was Louis, he is recorded as “Lewis” in the cemetery records; and on the gravestone, “Amen” is misspelt “Amem”.

My tweets

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Whoniversaries 16 September: Tomb of the Cybermen #3, The Ribos Operation #3, Zygon hunting

i) births and deaths

16 September 2014: death of Michael Hayes, who directed Fourth Doctor stories The Androids of Tara (1978), The Armageddon Factor (1979) and City of Death (also 1979).

16 September 2016: death of Andrew Staines, who played Benik's sergeant in The Enemy of the World (Second Doctor, 1968), Goodge in Terror of the Autons (Third Doctor, 1971), the Captain in Carnival of Monsters (Third Doctor, 1973) and Keaver in Planet of the Spiders (1974). He was a nephew of Barry Letts, the show's producer for the Pertwee years.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

16 September 1967: broadcast of episode 3 of Tomb of the Cybermen. The Cybermen reveal their plan to convert all the explorers into Cybermen; the expedition have different views on this prospect.

16 September 1978: broadcast of episode 3 of The Ribos Operation. K9 rescues the Doctor and Romana from the Graff, but they encounter him again in the catacombs (with Binro the Heretic).

iii) date specified in canon

16 September 1909: Martha and the Tenth Doctor get caught up in Lord Haleston's hunt for monsters near the Lake District village of Templewell (in Stephen Cole's 2007 novel, Sting of the Zygons).

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A Bruges art mystery – Jean-Claude Servais, the escalator paintings and Isabelle

We've been to Bruges twice in the last few days, parking both times in the Zilverpand car park, which is nice and central. Overlooking the escalators between level -1 and level -2 of the car park are two rather interesting art works – one showing, er, people on an escalator, the other showing a rural local scene with a white bird in the foreground. (Just to add confusion, the second picture is shown in the first picture, but on the wrong side of the escalators – it's actually on the right-hand wall as you go down.)


Both appear to be signed "J Servais 92".

My Google-fu may be weak today, but I've totally failed to find any reference to anyone called Servais in connection with the Zilverpand centre. But they are striking works of art.

I have a hesitant identification of the artist. The Belgian comics artist Jean-Claude Servais normally signs his name in capitals, and also normally adds an emphatic C for Claude, but even so I think his signature looks similar to those on the Zilverpand paintings. (Singatures taken from various hand-drawn art found in online auctions.)

Jean-Claude Servais' usual style is admittedly more naturalistic than the escalator painting. Out of curiosity I got and read his 1984 album, Isabelle, which is the most popular of his books available on Kindle. The second frame of the third page is Isabelle, the title character, greeting her doll:

The troubador who loves Isabelle fortunately sings in lower case:

So we can do a more direct comparison of the writing, particularly since the word "serais" is conveniently in the first line of that frame, and "erv" in "épervier" a bit lower down:


Well, you can choose to believe it or not, but I'm reasonably convinced that this is the same handwriting, making allowances for the different flourishes you make when writing out a song or when signing an artwork.

Isabelle is beautifully illustrated, but I found the plot a bit less compelling – she and her lover are, er, very young; both are swept away to the Land Of Scantily Clad Fairies, where the Fairy Queen becomes jealous of Isabelle and brings about her doom. Still, I might try some of his later work.

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My tweets

  • Tue, 10:21: RT @TomMcTague: The cretinous stupidity of Britain’s four-year diplomatic disaster—a story not about rights and wrongs, but strength and (s…
  • Tue, 10:45: RT @GerardAraud: The rhetoric is stunning. Why suddenly did the UK go to such extreme accusations they know to be false? Why do they accuse…

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Whoniversaries 15 September: Destiny of the Daleks #3, Pete Tyler

i) births and deaths

15 September 1945: birth of Clive Merrison, who played Callum in Tomb of the Cybermen (Second Doctor, 1967) and the Deputy Chief Caretaker in Paradise Towers (Seventh Doctor, 1988).

15 September 1961: birth of Colin McFarlane, who played the oice fo tthe Heavenly Host in Voyage of the Damned (Ninth Doctor, 2007), General Pierce in Torchwood: Children of Earth (2009) and Jonathan Moran in Under the Lake / Before the Flood (Twelfth Doctor, 2014)

15 September 1993: birth of Fady Elsayed, who played Ram Singh in Class (2016).

15 September 1995: death of Alan Bromly, director of The Time Warrior (Third Doctor, 1973-74) and Nightmare of Eden (Fourth Doctor, 1979).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

15th September 1979: broadcast of episode 3 of Destiny of the Daleks. Davros and the Doctor bicker, and the Movellans are revealed to be robots.

15 September 2012: broadcast of A Town Called Mercy, the Eleventh Doctor's Western episode.

iii) date specified in canon

15th September 1954: birth of Pete Tyler, Rose's father.

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A giant flying penis, with bells on

We had a little excursion yesterday to the Roman Archæological Museum in Oudenburg, close to Bruges Oudenburg is the location of a Roman fort which is gradually being excavated.

Until the end of next month, they have a special exhibition on the theme of “Roma Intima: love, lust and the body” which is basically about sex in Ancient Rome as told through material culture. It’s in-your-face entertaining, including rings with phallic motifs and the mysterious spintriæ, coin-like metal tokens with a number on one side and a sexual position on the other.

But the crowning glory is this amazing decoration of a woman riding a giant penis, with bells on. Apparently this is an example of a tintinnabulum – a door chime whose purpose was to ward off evil spirits. It certainly struck us as worth the (modest) price of admission on its own.

(They also have an exhibition of the Live Marble photographs by Nicolai Endegor, in which well-known nude sculptures are partially recreated with living women.)

To be honest, it’s only really worth going if you are in the Bruges/Ostend area anyway, and have half a morning or afternoon to kill and don't mind reading everything in Dutch. (It’s closed on Mondays, otherwise open weekday mornings and every afternoon.) But defintiely worth a look, especially if you can get there before the exhibition closes in late October.

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My tweets

  • Sun, 12:56: Fiction set in Belgium: a very brief overview https://t.co/BEvUeKJFDf for further consideration.
  • Sun, 14:48: Beyond Authenticity: the Spectre of Han Hegemony https://t.co/9YgvYD6FYg Vital analysis of Mulan by @jeannette_ng.
  • Sun, 15:18: Th�odore Jonet and his daughters Juliette and Emilie https://t.co/WgPdvBLanZ
  • Sun, 16:05: RT @mirandajewess: I have just found the best book in the whole world. It is a German grammar book from 1913. Stick with me… A THREAD htt…
  • Sun, 19:49: Flemish and Dutch friends: am I right in thinking that “werpen” is used more in Belgium and “gooien” in the Netherlands, but they both mean “throw”? Or is there a subtle difference in meaning that has passed me by?
  • Sun, 20:48: Just recalculated the farthest East I have been in my life. I had thought it was Suleimaniya, Iraq, at 45.4085E. (Visited in 2015.) But in 2012 I visited Telavi, Georgia, at 45.4833E, and returned to Tbilisi the long way round via Bakurtsikhe at 45.8594E. So Bakurtsikhe wins.
  • Mon, 08:57: That was close! https://t.co/ZMz1WsCujD
  • Mon, 09:30: Whoniversaries 14 September: Justin Richards, Peter Ling, Mind Robber #1, Time & Rani #2 https://t.co/m7mEUPABFK
  • Mon, 10:45: RT @sturdyAlex: In fairness, this gov’t did the Japan deal in a rush, have probably not read it, almost certainly not understood it, and th…
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Whoniversaries 14 September: Justin Richards, Peter Ling, Mind Robber #1, Time & Rani #2

i) births and deaths

14 September 1961: birth of Justin Richards, who has written more Doctor Who books than any other living writer (though still some way off Terrance Dicks).

14 September 1972: birth of Jenny Colgan, also a writer of several Doctor Who books, better known to the general public for her other writing.

14 September 2006: death of Peter Ling, who wrote the 1968 Second Doctor story The Mind Robber (though not the first episode; see below).

14 September 2014: death of Angus Lennie, who played the scavenger Storr in The Ice Warriors (Second Doctor, 1967) and the landlord Angus MacRanald in Terror of the Zygons (Fourth Doctor, 1975).

14 September 2018: death of Zienia Merton, who played Ping-Cho in the story we now call Marco Polo (First Doctor, 1964) and the registrar in The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith (Sarah Jane Adventures, 2009) – perhaps the longest gap between first and second appearances in the TV Whoniverse that we will ever see.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

14 September 1968: broadcast of first episode of The Mind Robber, one of the best single episodes of all time, written at short notice by script editor Derrick Sherwin when it became apparent that Peter Ling's script would not fill the time made available by cutting The Dominators. The Doctor escapes the lava flow by taking the Tardis outside space and time, to a mysterious white void, where it explodes, leaving Zoe memorably clinging to the console.

14 September 1987: broadcast of episode 2 of Time and the Rani. The Doctor escapes the Tetraps, but is caught again, and the Rani prepares to drain his brain.

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Théodore Jonet and his daughters Juliette and Emilie

We’re taking a couple of days out west, and yesterday once again visited the Groeningemuseum in Bruges. Last time we went, my imagination was captured by the portraits of Baron van Keverberg and his English wife Mary Lodge. Facing them is another striking portrait, of Théodore-Joseph Jonet and his daughters Juliette and Emilie, painted in 1832 by François-Joseph Navez.

The older daughter, Juliette, has recently got engaged and is showing off her ring. The girls’ mother had died some years back; these three people have been a close family unit of their own for a long time, and now it’s coming to an end. I love the expressions on their faces, particularly the father‘s. He is struggling between happiness for his daughter and sadness at losing her. He is a youthful 50 (photographs suggest that indeed he wore his years well, and he lived to the age of 80); a lawyer by profession, he has also just been elected to the parliament of the new Belgian state, whose destiny still hangs in the balance. The background is not the industrialised Charleroi/Nivelles area where he and the girls actually lived, but a promised land of soft Italian hills, with a classical plinth.

Juliette is playing it cool, and has been the calm one in the family for years; she is with the two people she has always loved, but also ready for the next step in her life. She is 21. Her fiancé is an up-and-coming doctor, who made his name during the fighting in Brussels in 1830 and in the year of the portrait was fighting again, this time with a cholera epidemic. They had five children, four sons and a daughter.

Emilie, aged 15, is also struggling with her emotions. You can see that she’s the energetic one, while Juliette has been quietly substituting for their mother since she died. Emilie may not be aware that she already knows her own future husband, her cousin Dominique, who was 16 in 1832; they did not marry until 1852, twenty years later when both were in their mid-30s. Dominique grew up to run a major glassworks in Charleroi (and followed his father-in-law/uncle into parliament); he and Juliette had no children, and he brought his nephews into the business.

It’s a lovely portrait, and of course it is more famous now than the people in it. Well done to Navez for capturing the emotions of his friend’s family at a moment of change for them and for their country.

Edited to add: It has been pointed out to me that Jonet’s age difference with his two daughters is almost exactly the same as my age difference with my own two daughters. B was born two months after my 30th birthday, and U when I was 35. Juliette was born a month after her father’s 29th birthday, and Emilie when he was 35. Perhaps this is part of why it resonated with me, but I think it’s a great portrait in any case.

Meanwhile in the next room and fifty years earlier, Augustin van Outryve wishes he was doing anything else than sitting for his portrait by Joseph-Benoît Suvée.