Hunter-Gathering For Wimps
A list of good things, and some thoughts on life as a car boot addict
Don’t you get so tired of those people on the internet who are all “I’VE GOT SOME EXTREMELY EXCITING NEWS BUT I’M NOT ALLOWED TO SAY WHAT IT IS YET.” I know I do. Having said that, I’ve got some extremely exciting news but I’m not allowed to say what it is yet. It’s exciting to me, anyway, and I hope it might be exciting to you too. Ideally at least one sixteenth of you. Hopefully that’s not aiming too high. We’ll find out soon. I’m allowed to talk to you about it on Monday, so I will do that, right here, probably quite early in the morning, after drinking too much coffee.
Here is some other stuff I have been enjoying and/or excited about lately:
Poor Things
Saw it at the cinema on Thursday. Initially thought it might end up being a bit too dark and hope-sapped for me but was soon colourfully and unpredictably disabused of that notion (I already knew Emma Stone was brilliant but had not realised Mark Ruffalo could be this inventively silly). Blimey was it good. Made me want to read the all the Alasdair Gray books that have been sitting on my shelf unexplored for far too long.
Our cat Jim making sure our cat Charles is never less than very very clean at all times
The song ‘It’s Alright, Ma, It’s Only Witchcraft’ by Fairport Convention
It’s the period in Fairport’s evolution just after this, when they raided the old English songbook and got fully in touch with the spirit of the earth and rolling sky, that tends to be most celebrated, and I love the first three or four records which emerged from that reinvention, but their debut LP, when Judy Dyble was in the band and they were still half trying to be American, is the one that really blows my wooliest socks off. Especially this glorious junkshop of a song from it - which I have listened to approximately 18 times this week - sung by Iain Matthews, who went on to form Matthews Southern Comfort, and later became the most important member by far of the solo artist Iain Matthews.
Making a conscious decision to shut the f*** up, not cause the planet to bow and crack under the weight of more opinions, and just listen to people sometimes, even if they are talking total crap
I have realised that, in addition to its many other perks, this is a useful way to conserve energy. Related thought: Perhaps some of the older, strangely quiet people I met when I was younger and said a big flood of words to weren’t shy at all, and were in fact doing precisely the same thing?
Speculating what method an angry drunk man I saw preferred to use to knock people out and debating whether it was general anaesthetic, a Vulcan nerve pinch or an extremely effective form of hypnosis, after I had been in town and heard the angry drunk man have an argument with someone on the opposite side of the street to him then in the heated aftermath explain to his girlfriend, “YOU DON’T GET IT, JULES: I DON’T GIVE A SHIT. I’LL KNOCK ANYONE OUT.”
I decided it was probably general anaesthetic.
Endings
I wanted to write a novel for over a decade, in my 20s, and my 30s, and the first couple of years of my 40s, but kept abandoning it, every time I tried. One of the big problems was the ending. I wished greedily to instantly be told it free of charge by a mysterious benevolent warlockian force, wanted to be able to see all the way to the opening at the far side of the tunnel where the ending sat waiting holding a nice lemon drizzle cake or chocolate eclair, craved the placatory entitled perks of being told by someone (who?) that it would all be ok, not a terrible disaster. I placed too much emphasis on it and it stymied me. A famous novelist - far more than one, in fact - once said “endings need to be earned”. It took a while before I discovered what my particular definition of that needed to be. As it turned out, I had been all wrong. The fact that I didn’t know the ending didn’t have to be the ghoulish defeating part that made everything impossible. It was the best part. It was the EXACT reason I should be writing the novel in the first place: the thrill of not knowing what was going to happen, and finding out, sentence by sentence, until I’d conjured a story out of air that was totally unique, not quite like anything that had ever existed before. Once I discovered this, via failure and pain and disappointment and self-delusion and financial terror and decades of wrestling with words, I finished and published a novel. Now, less than three years on from that, I’ve already written a second, and am partway through a third. I have no idea how it’s going to end but I can’t wait to find out. It would not be inaccurate to call that anticipation a form of addiction. The addiction’s source is the uncertainty, the mystery, the possibility of failure. I am stepping off a rocky ledge into some thick descending mist, trusting, but not knowing, there’s a huge soft mattress somewhere beneath me. I’m up here all alone. There’s nobody to hold my hand. If there was, it would only spoil the fun.
The sleeve of this record I bought recently
Unsurprisingly, it also sounds fantastic.
Carol Shields
Just go ahead and read everything she wrote in the last twelve years of her life. Then watch as all sorts of tiny cracks in the universe you never previously noticed open up and fill with colour. You should probably read what she wrote before that too, although I can’t personally vouch for it yet, as I’m still working my way hungrily backwards.
Sheep facts
Did you know that originally to count sheep to get to sleep meant not just to count sheep but to count breeds of sheep? I didn’t. Try it some time. It’s enormously effective. You’ll be “Scottish Blackface, Jacob, Zwartbles, Manx Loaghtan, Barbados Blackbelly, Florida Cracker…” ZZZZZZZ. Kind of like when a guy in a hospital was about to slash open my abdomen with a scalpel and asked me to count to ten and I was already knocked out before I’d even got to seven. It’s also an explanation for why, in the old days, if a shepherd oversaw a herd of wide ethnic diversity, you’d often find him a long way from his field with his arms stretched out in front of him and a far away expression on his face. Everyone knew that if you stumbled across a shepherd in this state, it was extremely important not to touch him.
Resisting an advice-saturated and solution-saturated culture and its attendant pressure to join in and hurl some more advice and solutions onto the pile
Am I doing Substack “correctly”? Probably not. A few years ago someone with a ginormous number of Instagram followers told me why I wasn’t having more “success” on Instagram. “It’s because you post about too many different things,” they said. “You need to curate and streamline your account, and spend more time concentrating on getting a lot of engagement and the right times of the week.” Needless to say I totally ignored this advice, and as a result I’m still not very good at Instagram. I’m reminded of this conversation when I see lots of posts about “how to do Substack” and how to make the most money from it, many of which seem to encourage people to write more posts about how to be successful on Substack. Personally speaking, I’m not on here to streamline or curate anything. I’m on here to write about whatever takes my fancy, even if it’s entirely different to the last thing I wrote, which it invariably is. That’s what I do in my books and I was told many years ago, numerous times, that it definitely wouldn’t work there, either. Yet, to my immense surprise, somehow, I’m still here, breathing actual air, writing the stuff I really want to write, rather than the stuff I think might have the most widespread commercial appeal, and not yet living in a cardboard box under a dripping bridge in the industrial zone of my least favourite city. I’m not sure precisely what can be learned from this, and I definitely don’t intend it as advice, but what perhaps could be learned from it is “a lot of advice sucks - especially if its theme is ‘how to be successful’.”
Another way I’m probably not doing this website correctly is, at the moment, keeping everything I write free. This includes this piece about my parents’ art which most of you won’t have been able to initially read in full and which I’ve now taken the paywall off. My assumption is that if people can afford a paid subscription and want to support what I do, they will, but I feel a bit uncomfortable about any potential of that fact interfering with the desire of other people who can’t afford it to read what I write.
For those who do take out a full annual subscription over the next week, I’m offering two of my books signed, plus a small original piece of my mum’s art (see below for sample: I’ll email you for your mailing address once the sub comes through).
Below, you’ll find a piece I wrote the summer before last, prior to opening an account here. Most people reading this right now won’t have seen it before. It’s about car boot sales and my (now semi-cured) addiction to them, and its genetic roots. I had reason to reread it recently and found that I still liked it, which, because I’m a hypercritical bastard to myself, is always a surprise when it comes to anything I wrote more than a year ago. Its theme is also somewhat relevant to the theme of the thing I’m announcing in Monday’s announcement*.
*Monday’s announcement is not that I’m organising my own car boot sale.
When I stay at my mum and dad’s house in Nottinghamshire, I sleep in what used to be the main bedroom – the only real bedroom – of the house. Ever since my parents got the place extended early this century and I graduated from some big cushions on the downstairs floor, I have shared this room with a variety of 20th Century clutter. Depending on which car boot sales my mum has been to recently, this can include anything from piles of beautiful 1960s fabric and costume jewellery to an old child’s doll with a hare’s head. I know she’d hate that I use that word, “clutter”, to describe what’s in there, and, in truth, it is not a fair description. She’s a very clean and tidy person and what’s in the room, as eclectic and haphazard as it might seem, is there due to a very careful process of editing: it has arrived as a result of her ability to see through layers of rubbish to the one interesting or rare artefact sitting on an overburdened camping table in a field in the north east corner of the Midlands.
I have been to a few car boot sales with my mum, but one in particular sticks in the mind. This would have been just over the border from Nottinghamshire into Lincolnshire in late spring 2009, the time of year when the grass often begins to get brown in that part of the country. I didn’t have the car boot bug at that point but was content to be able to purchase a straw hat for £2 and find a stall containing a few boxes of records, all of which had the initial appearance of being mega bargains but on closer inspection weren’t. I could see that there was nothing else at the car boot that could be of any interest or aesthetic worth to anyone. That was vastly clear. An hour later, I spotted the distant figure of my mum, who could not have been holding more paraphernalia if she had three extra arms. How many bags was it, altogether? In the version preserved in my mind it’s 14, and I’m sure it must have been half that, even in the less hyped reality of the day. I rushed over to help just in time for her not to drop the art deco lamp wedged awkwardly under her arm, and grilled her about what had happened. Where precisely was this other car boot sale she’d been to? And how did she get there and back so quickly? Because surely none of the stuff in these bags – a 1950s potter’s bowl, a Victorian paperweight, two beaded 1920s evening purses – could possibly have come from here.
I was approaching my 34th birthday in spring, 2009: a time of life when it can seem like your personality is pretty firmly established. But, looking back, I can see numerous quite significant changes that have happened in me since then, and several seem to involve the latent adoption of elements of my mum’s personality. Formerly a flailing maelstrom of uselessness at DIY and problem solving in the home, I’m now fairly competent at it. Soil and what grows in it is of infinitely more interest to me than it was then. And I now also seem to have inherited my mum’s ability to see through a wall of crap to the golden prize at car boot sales. When I picture my mum, the way she was as I was growing up, it’s as a distracted, highly industrious person with constantly full hands. A loaded paint brush is in one, a metal owl and a pot of Nasturtiums in the other. She is hurrying but also stopping to look at stuff. She has a vague idea of how many hours she has remaining on the given day and an incurably optimistic concept of what she can fit into them. It’s a picture that’s so clear in my head because all I need to do now to see it, a lot of the time, is check out my own reflection. I used to expect to turn into my dad: a loud person who swears at the telly and breaks bit of your house. But that has not turned out to be my destiny. I have become the woman with a surplus of old plates and no concept of time.
“No, this Thursday is no good, sorry. It’s the car boot sale. Oh, and I have the chiropractor, and quite a complex procedure at the dentist,” I said to someone recently. There’s quite a bit to unpick there. The order of importance is plain to see: car boot, then the upkeep of my body. Also: detectives might notice a few telltale links. Heavy bags of secondhand junk… chiropractor. Additionally: a car boot sale on a Thursday? That can’t be right. But, yes, they actually have midweek ones here in Devon, and they’re some of the best and most exciting, not least because they’re often solely populated by me and some septuagenarians who – without wishing to generalise – tend largely to not be searching for neglected abstract paintings, West German pottery and near mint first pressings of Donovan’s ‘Barabajagal’ LP. A few days ago, when asked to do a radio interview, I realised that the time suggested clashed with my favourite one of these midweek sales. “That’s ok!” I thought. “I can do the chat from the car boot.” What you probably won’t realise if you listen to it here is that, as it starts, I’m struggling to open my car door while holding – in addition to my phone – a mid-century rug (£5), eleven obscure countryside and knitting magazines from the late 70s (free!), a pile of brocade fabric (£8), a maroon waffle sweater (£3), a book from 1979 delving into the history of Newton Abbot (50p) and a nice clean original 45 of ‘Rock On’ by David Essex, with fully intact picture sleeve (25p). That was a pretty solid haul, I thought. Nothing super special or surprising, but undeniably all-round watertight. After doing my interview in the car, out of the wind, I popped back into the gentle melee and was disappointed to find that the lady with the lemon drizzle cake stall had packed up and left, but I bought some blueberries off the Fruit Man. Same amount as you get in the posh farm shop, but almost £3 cheaper. Result! As I paid, The Fruit Man multitasked impressively, seducing various passers by with fruit talk, and waving a pineapple at his friend Brian, who was some yards away
“I’ve got a pineapple here for 80p if you’d like it. Brian!” shouted the Fruit Man.
“No, I’m all right this morning, thanks,” replied Brian.
The Fruit Man is an unfailingly big draw, no matter which car boot he turns up at, and seems to me to be the wholesome antidote to the Meat Bloke at the car boot on the industrial estate just south of Exeter. While The Fruit Man is always unplugged and natural, the Meat Bloke uses a microphone to amplify his banter, so, no matter where you are in the boot sale, there is no escape from his attempts to seduce the crowd with his polythene bags of refrigerated bone and flesh. A DJ of Death, he leaves you with the feeling that you have wandered by mistake into some kind of 1980s Radio One Roadshow where lamb cutlets have taken the place of Bananarama. The boot sale with The Meat DJ is my least favourite boot sale, but that might also be because the first time I went to it, many years ago, a man got quite close to punching me in the face just because I took a photo of a small, fairly ordinary cabinet he was selling. “What the fuck are you doing?” he asked. I told him that I was taking a photo of the small, fairly ordinary cabinet to send to a friend, who was looking for a small, fairly ordinary cabinet. “Well, fucking don’t,” he said. “I didn’t give you permission to do that.” Perhaps the small, fairly ordinary cabinet had had trouble with paparazzi in the past? I pictured the man and the small fairly ordinary cabinet attending various high profile events in London, the man indiscriminately swinging at photographers who got too close to the small, fairly ordinary cabinet as the pair entered the VIP area. Then the photos that would appear on the front pages of the tabloids the following day of the small, ordinary cabinet and the man’s violent face, mid-punch, which would only exacerbate the problem, leading to more photographers hustling to get shots of the small, fairly ordinary cabinet at future VIP events in the capital.
My attitude to car boot sales is pretty much like my attitude to life: there’s very liittle I’m not interested in, on some level, but music is my chief concern. I begin by scanning for vinyl, then start to take a look at the bigger picture. A 25p copy of ‘Rock On’ – a freak minimalist glam rock masterpiece, anomalous in the David Essex repertoire, seductive to even a slightly glam rock resistent person like me – is more musically than materially exciting, and many a car boot will lead to nothing but box after box of Rogers and Hammerstein and Richard Clayderman, but there is always the slight possibility of something more unique: that possibility that used to be there in charity shops but has almost completely vanished now most of them just look up the most expensive Discogs price for every record and stick it on the front, and/or sell their highest end records online. With records at boot sales, I’m like a lion who’s caught the scent of a herd of antelope a couple of valleys away on the breeze. Even if the lion has just eaten, he’ll have a look. Sometimes I just know. There’s one very variable boot sale about 35 minutes from my house and a couple of weeks ago I got this strong primal feeling that I needed to be there at opening time but got held up by 45 minutes due to housework and traffic. My instincts were correct: two three quarter-empty boxes of records were there, waiting for me. You just knew, looking at what was left, that there had been some incredible stuff in there a short time ago. It was like the person who had left them had left them only because they had to leave something, left them because their very standards had been raised merely by what else was in the boxes. A personality of a former owner began to form from looking at these mere leavings: jazz-loving, meticulous. I bought ten for a tenner, and asked the stall holder where the LPs had come from. “My uncle,” he said. “There was a lot of other stuff, late 60s jazz.” “Some… psychedelic things?” I asked, holding my breath, to stop the tears coming. “Yes. Quite a few. A lot of Frank Zappa originals.” He hadn’t even needed to say it, the suggestion was all there in the three-quarter picked carcass. I’m not a Frank Zappa fan but that doesn’t mean that I don’t find the idea of finding originals of his early records in the wild very exciting. And as I write this it makes me realise that so much of my booting is in fact about the hunt itself, rather than the rewards. But the hunt only has meaning because what it can lead to isn’t just mass produced homogenous crap; it’s pieces of history, preserved parts of lives and narratives, all ranked and displayed and (often) priced in beautifully haphazard fashion.
Because of the theme of the novel I’m currently researching, but mostly just because I like doing it, I’ve spoken to a lot of people in the secondhand universe lately. When talking about how they got into it, they often say the same thing: it became a way of sustaining a habit, without simply haemmorhaging money to the extent that they could no longer afford to live. My mum stopped car booting for a couple of years as the pandemic raged, although this decision wasn’t solely related to Covid. She doesn’t sell any more and there’s no room for any more secondhand stuff in the house, not a free space for even the smallest junk shop painting on any wall. It was probably her longest break since one time around 2002 when she took a month off to recover after seeing a yellowing human skeleton being sold at a boot sale in east Nottinghamshire. She found that she missed the process of the car booting. Recently – possibly prompted by my rhapsodic tales of finding 1970s designer mushroom lamps for £2 – she has started booting again. No, there’s probably no point to it, but she loves it and gets a buzz from it. You could also argue there’s no point to me buying old records. After all, I already have plenty of them to listen to, and they’re nearly all available much cheaper via streaming services. No point, apart from the fact that they fill my days with infinite amounts of magic and intrigue and witchcraft and alchemy and wonder. While you’re chugging down this line of thinking, you might also want to take the time to argue that there’s no point to anything anyone does ever.
Here’s another reason to go to a car boot sale: you’re supporting sustainibility, taking part in a grand recycling project, spinning on the great roundabout of life. Here’s another: it’s full of interesting conversation. I don’t go to car boots for the people-watching and the chat but I increasingly enjoy that side of it. I buy some fabric for my girlfriend and hear the story of its origins, its geographical and family history, and, by extension, the touching tale of a late life love affair. “I’m not posh,” I overhear a man say, as he attempts to flog a van full of cheap duvets. “I don’t have a bidet. I stand upside down in the shower.” A couple of weeks later, I watch what appears to be a 250 year-old wizard pick up a World War II gas mask. “Ere Paul!” he shouts back to a colleague, sitting on the back of a van. “Look at this! Shall I get it?” Paul answers in the affirmative and the gas mask seller agrees to a price of £12. “I wore that in Waitrose the other week,” admits the seller. The following week, looking at a stall full of art and old gardening tools, I overhear a man carrying a watercolour of an owl tell a woman that he was responsible for the rise of Tracy Emin. An apparently unloved stall in the corner of another boot sale that doesn’t seem to be selling anything other than invisible tickets for Jesus, asks, “Do you need to believe in Creation?” I preferred it just before that, when I misread “Creation” as “Crediton”. I do need to believe in Crediton. It’s a good solid Devon town, underrated, not too pockmarked with second homes, and boasts two excellent bookshops, each very different from the other.
You can get conned into thinking being rich is the answer to life. The idea seems to be that everything’s smooth and simple and you get to pay other people to do boring and tiring things for you. But, while I’m only guessing at this with no firsthand experience, I reckon that in truth being rich is mostly pretty bad for you, takes away your hunger and all the good things that come with your hunger, sands your creativity smooth and dull: whether that creativity comes in the form of actual art, or the way you cook, decorate your home or edit your possessions. I used to assume very rich people had taste. And they do: terrible, terrible taste, a lot of the time. But even if their taste is refined and thoughtful, it’s all too easy for them. They go online, find exactly what they want, and, without worrying too much about the cost, make it arrive at their house the next day. Meanwhile, they could be at the boot sale. They could be finding amazing stuff they’d never thought to look for. They could be experiencing all that ambience, all that tumble of life. When I look at the furniture in my house, I am looking at the story of years and years of bargain secondhand purchases, in the real world. Not worrying about money is nice, it’s true. But it’s also quite nice to look at your possessions and witness them tell the story of your life as a hunter-gatherer back to you.
Of course, I’m not saying rich and affluent people don’t go to car boot sales. But what I predominantly hear at boot sales is a working class West Country voice: a voice you don’t hear much in the high end tourist towns, the second home meccas, the Totneses, the Salcombes, the Chagfords, the Padstows. It’s nothing at all like the voice of where I come from yet feels more relatable and familiar to me than the voice I hear in the hipster coffee shops and pubs and markets of the South West: the places that so bluntly remind me of my peasant heritage, every time I visit them. I am hyper aware at the car boot that there are people who are here for far more financially pressing reasons than I am. I don’t need to visit a car boot to survive, to eat, to make next month’s rent, but there is no doubt that I have been pushed more in their direction at times due to the fact that my writing has not quite given me the income that I sometimes hoped it would. That leaves me with the odd feeling – a feeling I get in other complex ways, sometimes, too – of being a just a tiny bit glad that the world isn’t more interested in what I do creatively.
But apparently it’s ultimately all genetic, the car booting. Before me and my mum there was my nan’s mum who, in the small gaps between giving birth to 16 children, somehow found the time to absolutely rinse the jumble sales of 1930s Liverpool for the best bargains they had to offer. The booting gene skipped a generation in the case of my nan, who, though she didn’t possess my mum’s thrifty digging instincts, enjoyed the fruits of them, when, during the 1990s, her tiny terrace in Nottinghamshire began to benefit from pots and chairs and plants and paintings my mum had found at car boots. There was a lot going on back then, so much more than I realised at the time. The Dog Shed at the bottom of our garden (known by that name because of the bite marks all over its doors and architraves) filled up with Lloyd Loom chairs and Singer sewing machines. If my mum wasn’t cooking or painting or cleaning and tidying or gardening, she was outside, sanding down a cupboard. “I was working full time and looking after a husband and a teenage son,” she says now. “Looking back, I don’t know how on earth I managed it all.” A small watercolour of Venice by a Royal Academy painter – no Google back then, but Nottingham Central Library turned out to be my mum’s friend, although she forgets the name of the artist now – was purchased for 25p then sold at Sotheby’s for several hundred pounds. A child’s vintage pine bed was successfully lifted into the back of a Ford Mondeo estate, unassisted, using all the strength in her five foot one frame.
The chair mania got out of control, had to be reined in. She learned, as I have after her, that not every great cheap vintage chair has to come home with you. There were missteps too: the strange, fascinating, possibly Victorian woven object which my mum’s best friend Jane informed her was actually just an ancient dog chew, the futuristic, rounded 1950s bathroom cabinet that she only realised was made of Asbestos halfway through a sanding job. She and Jane – or Miss Needham, as I am still inclined to think of her, since she was once my schoolteacher – began to do little sales together and fairs and markets: fabrics, mirrors, art, vintage handbags, all very beautifully presented, all at great prices. Some of the fairs would begin at 6am, which meant setting up in the dark. This was problematic, on the day that my mum decided to use our old tent, which didn’t reveal itself to have been torn to shreds by The Dog Shed’s numerous hungry mice until the sun came up. Not so many people came to the stall that day.
“We never made any proper money from it,” my mum remembers. “It was all for fun.” Like my own car booting, there was nothing that would justify the amount of travel expenses or time involved, if you thought about it solely in mercenary terms, but my mum and Miss Needham were not thinking about it in even slightly mercenary terms. If I looked at what I’ve got at car boots this year – even the half century-old designer mushroom lamps, even the most beautiful and psychedelic fabric, even the £1 records that are worth £25 – then looked at the amount I’ve spent on fuel getting there, I could not “justify” it as worthwhile to anyone with a cold hard head for figures. But the bargains certainly feel worthwhile, especially in this world where fuel, and almost everything else, has become so ludicrously expensive. At a car boot sale, you feel like you’ve temporarily stepped outside that world, outside a society that’s been screwed over by big businesses and politicians and techno capitalist greed.
Around the turn of the last Millennium, my mum and I did a stall together – not at a car boot, this time, but at a flea market in Arnold, a sprawling suburb of Nottingham. My mum was selling her usual eclectic selection of knick-knacks, but in truth I was there for only one reason: I had a pile of band t-shirts I was no longer planning to wear, probably two dozen or more, and thought it would be a good way to get rid of them. My mum had her doubts about whether anyone would be interested, especially at two or three quid a pop (“You don’t want to rip people off!”), but within about five minutes, a gang of salivating punk and indie kids had grabbed the lot. I’ve returned to that day a few times in my mind recently. I wonder how much of what I sold has survived until now. Is someone somewhere still wearing the Posies t-shirt I bought at Rock City in 1993, or the Dinosaur Jr one I got in Hockley the year before, or the – by then gossamer – Replacements one I bought in Leicester the year after? Did any end up on eBay, for £100, as so many from that era have? I wonder which records I spent my £50 profit on, at the stall nextdoor-but-one, and which ones I calamitously overlooked. I feel like I can still feel some of the feelings I felt that day: warm Nottinghamshire feelings, mixed with feelings that my life was starting to amount to something (I’d fairly recently got a job at a newspaper in London), warm family feelings. I’d like to go back and chat to that version of my mum, who was just a couple of years older than I am now, and, much like me now, a clean, tidy workaholic battling natural maximalist tendencies. I’d like to learn a bit more from her about the flea market and car boot universe than I was open to doing at the time. I distinctly remember that at the start of the Arnold flea market there was a loud whistle, or perhaps even a gunshot, and after that nearly everyone who had been queuing ran towards the stalls, wild-eyed. Some people shoved strangers as they ran and at least one person was sent sprawling onto the concrete. A disturbing amount of exposed tongue was evident. It was an absurd thing to see fully mature adults doing, I thought, as someone who believed he was a fully mature adult. I don’t think my mum ran on that occasion, but I feel sure she did, on others. Me? Of course I didn’t. But, if I could return right now to that fairly ordinary day in the place I come from, you can bet I would. I’d run as fast as my legs would carry me.
Dear Tom, Your lists and compendiums are the jewel in the Crown of all Internet listicles.
At the risk of public humiliation, I have to say that counting sheep breeds is exactly how I get myself to sleep. Alphabetically. Although other fibre-producing critters are also permitted - it's the only way to get the Q. And if I ever get that far, I cheat for the X with Exmoor Horn...