The team
Angela Hicken
Madelaine - the book thief
Penny
Rose Ratcliffe
Rachel the editor
Jane the Archivist
Cordelia Gray
Friday Next
Jacky Percival
Other teams
England, Their England Find!
I was telephoned by Bishop John Dennis who after reading about the project was keen to tell me about A.G. Macdonell's satirical comic novel from the 1920s. The book examines the changing nature of this interwar era with a style and content comparable to P.G. Wodehouse and Jerome K. Jerome - it has been referred to as "both witty and wise, always shrewd and sometimes profound" (The Sunday Times).
The novel is written as if a travel memoir, with a young Scotsman working for a series of London newspapers. It is famed for its description of a village cricket match with a ball that takes four pages to be caught. The final chapter sees our hero get on a train at Waterloo and choose a station at random at which to alight - it is Alton. He walks from there to Winchester, via the "straggly, red-tiled village of Alresford" where he refreshes himself with some Hampshire beer. He lorry-hops to the "ancient city" and first admires the great statue of Alfred before moving on to the mammoth grandeur of the cathedral "stretching its giant length, all grey and moss-green and pale yellow, across the grass like a sleeping leviathan."
Donald tours the city including the College buildings where a comic interlude with one of the young students takes place. The book ends as Donald dozes on the slopes of St Catherines Hill, the medieval spell of Winchester still lingering.
10 September 2009 from Angela Hicken
Finds
- And here is one we missed
- And, finally, one for Hallowe'en
- How did we miss this one?
- John Wyndham's Hampshire connection
- Reading the countryside
- New Milton's new Milton
- Heywood Sumner in South Gorley
- PG Wodehouse in Emsworth
- Walking In My Sleep
- Nicola Slade's Victorian Mysteries
- England's Lost Eden
- June Tate
- Bullington
- Speed The Plough: A Country Song
- A Hampshire scarecrow: Worzel Gummidge
- Queens Arms
- Haslar Hospital Memories
- Magical writing for children
- Inspired by the Tichborne Claimant
- Gypsy Girl Trilogy
- Rev. Gilbert White (1720-1793) and The Natural History of Selborne
- Coffee with Date and Walnut Loaf
- The Play Room
- Kipling's dislikes
- Deadman's Plack
- Netley Abbey Ruins
- Portsea Sagas
- Lilian Harry's Family Connections
- Crossing the Bar
- John Betjeman and Bevis Hillier
- Growing up in Portsmouth
- More Edward Thomas
- Two blokes and a shed
- In the shadow of the Cathedral
- Hampshire Days
- Mr Hardy Writes a Poem
- "Steep" is apt
- Thackeray in Fareham
- Forgotten Favourite?
- Daniel Clay's 'Broken'
- Pell and Tess
- Edward Thomas and Froxfield
- Betjeman explores hidden corners of Hampshire
- Rebecca Smith
- Right of Access
- Hampshire songs, poems, and ditties
- In this house
- Words & Walks
- England, Their England
- An Ode to a Road
- The story of a house
- Crime Connections to the City
- John Keat's Ode to Autumn
- William Lisle Bowles, poet
- Future Princes of Winchester
- Spike Island by Philip Hoare
- The marriage of souls
- Rural Rides: William Cobbett
- Elinor Brent-Dyer remembered
- Dornford Yates' Hampshire connection
- The Marlows, their maker and stealing a corner of Dorset
- Saint Cross: England's Oldest Almshouse
- Winchester the whole day through
- HOW TO BE A BETTER PERSON
- Otterbourne's Enid Blyton? Charlotte M. Yonge (1823-1901)
- Odo's Hanging is missing
- The Warden
- Charles Kingsley's Letters
- Owslebury Bottom
- See it My Way
- Introduction to Melesina Trench
- Some Hampshire road signs read Jane Austen Country
- Flora Thompson: published poet
Recent posts
- Virginia Smith remembered
- Mary Sumner
- A272: An Ode to a Road (by Andy)
- The hunt continues
- Winchester MP Mark Oaten to publish book
- Chalet School
- Bags of Books and Enthusiasm
- Chalet School author
- Poetry in the pub
- Wealth of words in Winchester
- Hampshire Gets Going
Help the team
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