Today will be an in and out day. I shall be in for most of the morning, editing, and then nipping down to the dentist, then home and then staying in, reading. I’d fallen out of the habit of regular reading, so I am giving myself at least one hour a day with a proper book, usually on the balcony during the ‘quietening hour.’ This is the time, from about three o’clock onwards, when the day boats start to leave, and a general feeling of hush falls over the part of the harbour I can see. When the last one leaves sometime after four, there is then the ‘very quiet’ hour, when not much out there moves at all. There’s always an end-of-term feeling to the day down there, an aftershock of relief after another mad day of the nosey and the ecstatic, the bewildered and the frantic. Relief from the crowds who block the roads, follow their guides, do as they’re told and then become completely bewildered as to what to do for the rest of their four hours here. The ecstatic make the most of it in admiration of the sights, the architecture, and the climb to the village, or they enjoy the excitement of a safari made by bus or taxi, while the frantic are another story. They have planned, researched, seen pictures asked questions and know what they are doing: walk to there, quick dip, hurry to there, bus at this time, up to the top, find museum, find museum closed (should have researched more deeply), get out Google Maps to get down to the harbour, get lost, can’t find the cycle way or the two lane highway that Maps say is a road but is in fact 390 steps, but somehow make it back to the boat on time.
All imagined from up here, of course, as I am only going by memories of being down there at that time, but if that’s what is still going on, then I can feel the aftershock of relief from the balcony, and that’s when it’s a good time to read.
Anyway, what is it to be next?

That’s one shelf of the kind of thing I’ve been reading over the past eight years: History, mainly Victorian, and if you look closely, you’ll find some gems. ‘Dying for the Gods’ was particularly hard work, and sorry to say, I’ve forgotten most of it, but then it was specialised (human sacrifice and bog bodies in archaeology as background to a mystery novel). The book, ‘Plaka’, I picked up in a second-hand bookshop in Athens, and it’s all about the history of that part of Athens, with drawings and photos. It’s a Greek publication if anyone is interested in borrowing it. ‘East End 1888’ is particularly fascinating if you are interested in that specific year beyond Jack the Ripper. I’ve just finished, though, Agatha Christie’s autobiography, and I’ve been through all of these on this shelf, so I need to look for something else. That, after having my teeth examined, is this afternoon’s job. I may have to go to the next shelf, where I am once again tempted to read ‘Dracula’ for about the 40th time. Or I may have another bash at the first page of the Poe novel (I’ve never got beyond the first sentence/page – it feels like they are the same thing).

Anwyay, that’s me today. Who knows what tomorrow will be like? That page has not been written yet.

















