Friday reading

Current
Titus Alone, by Mervyn Peake
Chasm City, by Alastair Reynolds
Mostly Void, Partially Stars, by Joseph Fink
Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd, by Nick Mason

Last books finished
Goodbye To All That, by Robert Graves
Science Fiction: The Great Years, eds. Carol and Frederik Pohl
The Ministry for the Future, by Kim Stanley Robinson
Driving Miss Daisy, by Alfred Uhry
The Unstable Realities of Christopher Priest, by Paul Kincaid

Next books
Sandkings, by George R.R. Martin
Romeinse sporen: het relaas van de Romeinen in de Benelux met 309 vindplaatsen om te bezoeken, by Herman Clerinx

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My tweets

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Whoniversaries 5 March

i) births and deaths

5 March 1932: birth of Gertan Kauber, who played the dimly seen galley-master in the story we now call The Romans (First Doctor, 1965) and Ola in The Macra Terror (Second Doctor, 1967)

5 March 1972: birth of James Moran, writer of The Fires of Pompeii (Tenth Doctor, 2008) and the Torchwood episode Sleeper (2008); co-writer of Torchwood: Children of Earth: Day Three (2009).

5 March 1974: birth of Matt Lucas, who played Nardole in the Twelfth Doctor era.

5 March 2012: death of Philip Madoc, who was Brockley in Daleks – Invasion Earth 2150 AD (Movie 1966), Eelek in The Krotons (Second Doctor, 1968-9), the War Lord in The War Games (Second Doctor, 1969), Solon in The Brain of Morbius (Fourth Doctor, 1976), and Fenner in The Power of Kroll (Fourth Doctor, 1978-9).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

5 March 1966: broadcast of "The Steel Sky", first episode of the story we now call The Ark. The Tardis lands on a vast spaceship inhabited by humans and Monoids; Dodo's cold spreads throughout its inhabitants. First full episode with Dodo, for whom I have an obscure affection.

5 March 1979: broadcast of second episode of The Talons of Weng-Chiang. The Doctor and Jago find a ghost at the theatre; Leela and Litefoot find Mr Sin at the door.

5 March 2008: broadcast of Something Borrowed (Torchwood), the one where Gwen gets married despite an alien pregnancy.

iii) date specified in-universe

5 March 2005: death of Clara Oswald's mother Ellie.

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A Buzz in the Meadow, by Dave Goulson

Second paragraph of third chapter:

From a very young age I kept newts and common toads in tanks in my bedroom, and this went atypically well. The toads in particular made great pets, seemingly taking to captivity and providing great entertainment by hoovering up mealworms with their extending, sticky tongues. When I grew bored of them, or ran out of mealworms from the supply that I bred in a box under my bed, I could simply release the toads back into the garden. However, I longed to have some more exotic amphibians, and eventually I badgered my parents into buying me a pair of North American leopard frogs for Christmas: attractive, bright-green frogs with (as you might guess from the name) a profusion of black spots. I filled one of my glass fish tanks with piles of stones, peat, some plants and a small pond, to make an attractive home for them. It looked great and the frogs settled in well, but after just a few weeks their energetic hopping about caused one of the piles of stones to topple; I came home from school one day to find them both squashed.

A very entertaining book about wildlife and diversity, mainly around the author's home in rural France but with flashbacks to his childhood and student and young researcher days in England. Mostly it is about insects, but there are three chapters on plants and one on reptiles and amphibians. The underlying theme of course is our need and responsibility to protect biodiversity and the environment, and the last couple of chapters are grim surveys of the risks ahead if we fail. Not my subject at all, but passionately written with lots of details that will keep coming back to me. You can get it here.

This was my top unread book acquired in 2015. Next on that pile is Comic Inferno, by Brian Aldiss.

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Whoniversaries 4 March

i) births and deaths

4 March 2016: death 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

ii) broadcast anniversaries

4 March 1967: broadcast of fourth episode of The Moonbase. The Doctor defeats the Cybermen by using the gravitron to make them float away into space.

4 March 1972: broadcast of second episode of The Sea Devils. The Doctor and Jo escape the the nearby sea base and discover that the Master is stealing equipment.

4 March 1978: broadcast of fifth episode of The Invasion of Time. The Doctor and friends escape, and the Doctor persuades Borusa to let him have the Great Key.

iii) date specified in-universe:

4 March 2005: setting of the opening part of Rose, the first Ninth Doctor story.

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Old Friends, by Jody Houser et al

Second frame of third part:

Another very successful installment in the series of Thirteenth Doctor comics by Houser and an all-woman team of artists. Here, the Tardis team meet up with none other than the Corsair, subject of a throwaway line about Time Lords changing gender in The Doctor's Wife, here a swaggering part-time criminal who does it for fun rather than out of malevolence. The Corsair is a great creation, a different take on the Doctor's irreverence for authority and tradition, and Houser has the two developing a lovely sparking relationship, convincingly giving the sense of two people who know each other well but maybe not always as well as they think. The core narrative is that the Doctor is accused of stealing a valuable object which in fact was stolen by the Corsair, and this lands them in all sorts of trouble. The rest of the Tardis crew don't get a lot of page time, but this is the Corsair's story, and it's a good one. You can get it here.

This was my top unread comic in English. Next on that pile is Wonder Woman: The Golden Age, by William Moulton Marston with art by Harry G. Peter.

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My tweets

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Whoniversaries 3 March

i) births and deaths

3 March 1924: birth of John Woodnutt, who played George Hibbert in Spearhead from Space (1970), the Draconian Emperor in Frontier in Space (1973), Broton and the Duke of Forgill in Terror of the Zygons (1976), and Seron in The Keeper of Traken (1981).

3 March 2004: death of Sheila Dunn, who played Blossom Lefavre in The Daleks' Master Plan (First Doctor, 1965), the computer voice of the Electromatic company in The Invasion (Second Doctor, 1968), and Petra Williams in Inferno (Third Doctor, 1970). She was married to Douglas Camfield, who directed all three of those stories.

ii) broadcast anniversary

3 March 1973: broadcast of second episode of Frontier in Space. The Doctor and Jo are brought to Earth for questioning, where the Doctor is captured by the Draconians and then recaptured by the humans.

iii) date specified in canon

3 and 4 March 1215: setting of The King's Demons (1983).

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350 days of plague: menhirs and Mercury

A worrying surge in the Belgian COVID numbers last week, though it seems to be tailing off and we're still below the levels reached at the end of December And what changes things a lot is that we are now getting vaccinations, if not as quickly as the UK or US (but still quicker than most of the world); U and B both got theirs last Thursday.

Also continuing to work through the Best Ever Indian Cookbook and did the spicy lamb and potato stew recipe, which was very nice indeed.

My menhir expedition last week went a little more thoroughly than I had anticipated, covering a dozen menhirs and dolmens, and a tumulus that you can actually walk inside.

This week is one of those moments when you can see the planet Mercury if you have a clear south-eastern sky at the time of sunrise. (Or north-eastern if you are in the southern hemisphere.) Three years ago there was a particularly good evening apparition (to use the technical term) and I managed to see the planet for the first time in my life. I got up early both on Sunday and this morning to try again – trickier because it's much lower in the sky on spring mornings than in the evenings. On Sunday I went down to the pond thinking that I could see the rising planets from the top of the observation towerTorenvalk observation tower, getting up at 6 and there by 6.30. Unfortunately there was still enough low-level haze to the east to blur out Mercury (and Jupiter, which is nearby at present). At 7.20, with ten minutes to go before sunrise, I spotted a surprisingly bright object in the sky which I had not seen before. But as I keep watching it became clear that it was an aeroplane catching the sun's rays. That's my chance gone for this spring, I think; the forecast for the next few mornings is cloudier. Still, I was able to admire two more sculptures by Ad Wouters, the Torenvalk (kestrel) itself and an impressive leaping frog.

I can't resist quoting Kurt Vonnegut's description of the inhabitants of Mercury from The Sirens of Titan:

The planet Mercury sings like a crystal goblet.
It sings all the time.
One side of Mercury faces the Sun.
That side has always faced the Sun. That side is a sea of white-hot dust.
The other side faces the nothingness of space eternal. That side has always faced the nothingness of space eternal. That side is a forest of giant blue-white crystals, aching cold.
It is the tension between the hot hemisphere of day-without-end and the cold hemisphere of night-without-end that makes Mercury sing.
Mercury has no atmosphere, so the song it sings is for the sense of touch.
The song is a slow one. Mercury will hold a single note in the song for as long as an Earthling millennium. There are those who think that the song was quick, wild, and brilliant once – excruciatingly various. Possibly so.
There are creatures in the deep caves of Mercury.
The song their planet sings is important to them, for the creatures are nourished by vibrations. They feed on mechanical energy.
The creatures cling to the singing walls of their caves.
In that way, they eat the song of Mercury.
The caves of Mercury are cozily warm in their depths.
The walls of the caves in their depths are phosphorescent. They give off a jonquil-yellow light.
The creatures in the caves are translucent. When they cling to the walls, light from the phosphorescent walls comes right through them. The yellow light from the walls, however, is turned, when passed through the bodies of the creatures, to a vivid aquamarine.
Nature is a wonderful thing.
The creatures in the caves look very much like small and spineless kites. They are diamond-shaped, a foot high and eight inches wide when fully mature.
They have no more thickness than the skin of a toy balloon.
Each creature has four feeble suction cups – one at each of its corners. These cups enable it to creep, something like a measuring worm, and to cling, and to feel out the places where the song of Mercury is best.
Having found a place that promises a good meal, the creatures lay themselves against the wall like wet wallpaper.
There is no need for a circulatory system in the creatures. They are so thin that life-giving vibrations can make all their cells tingle without intermediaries.
The creatures do not excrete.
The creatures reproduce by flaking. The young, when shed by a parent, are indistinguishable from dandruff.
There is only one sex.
Every creature simply sheds flakes of his own kind, and his own kind is like everybody else’s kind.
There is no childhood as such. Flakes begin flaking three Earthling hours after they themselves have been shed.
They do not reach maturity, then deteriorate and die. They reach maturity and stay in full bloom, so to speak, for as long as Mercury cares to sing.
There is no way in which one creature can harm another, and no motive for one’s harming another.
Hunger, envy, ambition, fear, indignation, religion, and sexual lust are irrelevant and unknown.
The creatures have only one sense: touch.
They have weak powers of telepathy. The messages they are capable of transmitting and receiving are almost as monotonous as the song of Mercury. They have only two possible messages. The first is an automatic response to the second, and the second is an automatic response to the first.
The first is, “Here I am, here I am, here I am.”
The second is, “So glad you are, so glad you are, so glad you are”
There is one last characteristic of the creatures that has not been explained on utilitarian grounds: the creatures seem to like to arrange themselves in striking patterns on the phosphorescent walls.
Though blind and indifferent to anyone’s watching, they often arrange themselves so as to present a regular and dazzling pattern of jonquil-yellow and vivid aquamarine diamonds. The yellow comes from the bare cave walls. The aquamarine is the light of the walls filtered through the bodies of the creatures.
Because of their love for music and their willingness to deploy themselves in the service of beauty, the creatures are given a lovely name by Earthlings.
They are called harmoniums.

Go on, say it: “Here I am, here I am, here I am.” And then, “So glad you are, so glad you are, so glad you are.” It'll make you feel a bit better.

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My tweets

  • Mon, 12:10: RT @bagatsen: @nwbrux How could I not click through with a teaser like that?
  • Mon, 12:36: It’s exactly a year since my last pre-pandemic trip: two days in London and a weekend party in Cambridge, coming back on the 1104 Sunday Eurostar on 1 March 2020. Hope to see you all again soon.
  • Mon, 12:56: Rock of ages: how chalk made England https://t.co/899mjQl983 Lovely long read.
  • Mon, 12:58: RT @Cygie: Vandaag zien we grote impact op de COVID-19 cijfers vanuit de woonzorgcentra. Via een overzicht kunnen we vaststellen dat de v…
  • Mon, 16:10: RT @KeohaneDan: This was a stupid tweet by me, which I regret tweeting now And this wasn’t the only stupid tweet. As some of us say here:…
  • Mon, 17:43: New post-war record for longest period since parliamentary by-election https://t.co/57VuDbaeY8 A glorious statistic. The current record is 581 days, between the Ogmore by-election (14/2/02) and Brent East (18/9/03). Thursday will be the 581st day since Brecon and Radnor (1/8/19).
  • Mon, 18:01: RT @worldcon2021: DisCon III is happy to announce the two bidders for the 2023 Worldcon Chengdu, China – @chengduworldcon Memphis, Ten…
  • Mon, 18:38: My Father’s Things, by Wendy Aldiss https://t.co/6DhLp43BKZ
  • Mon, 20:48: RT @HawardTom: We have sold 0 oysters to Europe in 2021 because our Govt failed to sort the procedures involved with unpurified shellfish a…
  • Tue, 08:07: Just posted a photo @ De Torenvalk https://t.co/6wBd2Tu9q6

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Whoniversaries 2 March

i) Births and deaths

2 March 1935: birth of Stephen Thorne, who played Azal in The Dæmons (Third Doctor, 1971), Omega in The Three Doctors (Third Doctor plus First and Second, 1972-73), the First Ogron in Frontier in Space (Third Doctor, 1973) and the male version of Eldrad in The Hand of Fear (Fourth Doctor, 1976). Heavily disguised in all of them, so no photos here.

2 March 1939: birth of Hugh Walters, who played three different roles in three different decades of Old Who: William Shakespeare in the story we now call The Chase (First Doctor, 1965), Runcible in The Deadly Assassin (Fourth Doctor, 1976), and Vogel in Revelation of the Daleks (Sixth Doctor, 1985).

2 March 1970: birth of Alexander Armstrong, who voiced the computer Mr Smith in the Sarah Jane Adventures and played lost pilot Reg Arwell in The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe (Eleventh Doctor, 2011).

2 March 1979: birth of Jocelyn Jee Esien, who played Clyde's mum in the Sarah Jane Adventures (though only eight years older than her on-screen son).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

2 March 1968: broadcast of fifth episode of The Web of Fear. The Great Intelligence reveals that it wants to drain the Doctor's brain of his knowledge. The Doctor and friends escape the Yeti, but the sinister fog starts to infiltrate their base.

2 March 1974: broadcast of second episode of Death to the Daleks. The Daleks cannot fire their weapons; the Exxilons capture everyone, but the Doctor and Sarah escape, and start wandering the tunnels.

2 March 1982: broadcast of second episode of Black Orchid. The long-lost elder brother turns out to be locked in the attic at Cranleigh; he has escaped, though, and falls to his death.

2 March 1983: broadcast of second episode of Enlightenment. The Eternals are racing for the prize of Enlightenment. They start reading Tegan's mind, and Turlough jumps overboard.

2 March 1984: broadcast of fourth episode of Planet of Fire

2 March 1985: broadcast of third episode of The Two Doctors. Lots of nasty slaughter, but at the end the Sontarans and Androgums are dead and the Doctors and friends alive.

The fifth of seven dates in the year when six episodes of Old Who were broadcast.