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Ryan and I were to Kew today and got to climb the Pagoda.

Kew

Feb. 7th, 2025 03:02 pm
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Dom and I went to see the Orchids at Kew today.

2024 to me

Dec. 31st, 2024 11:01 am
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A good year, I think, although I would have given a different review back in September or October when we were down a bathroom as well as a kitchen! After all, the second half of the year was somewhat dominated by the building work, but we do now have a shiny new kitchen to show for it. I wouldn't want to do it again any time soon – but also don't have to.

Time-off this year for me went well: I had a couple of relaxing holidays in the South Downs and Long Melford. I also had a number of interesting and entertaining work events. Many of my friend-colleagues are either taking time out or moving on next year and I'm going to very much miss them.

We finished Heresy, She Wrote which I thoroughly enjoyed. There is now Heresy in Paradise scheduled for next year. My 2024 also involved, much Darktide, plenty of SteamWorld Heist II and a bit of Return to Moria as well.

In general terms – overall I enjoyed the year and ended in a good place.

In detail
As per usual, a month-by-month breakdown.

January – It was a chilly, uneventful month. I worked, played Darktide and watched some films.
February – The Hatted One joined the twins and I for the Infinity Mirror Rooms exhibition at the Tate Modern. I had dinner with Liz W at Tas.
March – Uneventful, with a quiet birthday celebration.
April – There was a Kew trip. There was also some gaming: both video and roleplaying.
May – We saw The Kills at the Troxy at the start of the month and Dom ran an awesome, mad game for Alistair's 50th. We spent a week in the South Downs on a family holiday enjoying a castle, Marwell Zoo and Jane Austen's house.
June – We attended Martin and Ebee's civil ceremony day. I had a work awayday in London and at the end of the month Dom and I went to Gymkhana for my birthday meal (organised in March).
July - I watched the General Election online with Alistair. I attended Lesley's retirement do, meeting up with many former colleagues.
August - Visited Kew and saw my first Banksy. This is also when the building work started on the new kitchen.
September – Bea and I got cat tattoos together, I had a work trip to Edinburgh and Bea and I had a long weekend in Long Melford.
October – We celebrated 32 years together at Trinity, we visited Krys and Chris, we completed Heresy, She Wrote after 18 months and... I'm not quite sure how many sessions. At the end of the month I had a hospital appointment, but was declared clear of issues.
November – There was a work AwayDay housed at the Tate Modern. Gem and Olivia came over for board games and Bea and I had a sunny Kew Trip.
December – The kitchen work finally ended, I survived two back-to-back work Xmas dos and my mother stayed a few days over Xmas.


The Lists of Things
As is my tradition, here are my lists of things of 2024.

Twenty-one books read for the first time.
The Midnight Mayor - Kate Griffin
Magpie Murders - Anthony Horowitz
The Martian - Andy Weir
Moonflower Murders - Anthony Horowitz
Spinning Silver - Naomi Novik
Airs Above the Ground - Mary Stewart
The Neon Court - Kate Griffin
The Minority Council - Kate Griffin
Stray Souls - Kate Griffin
The Husbands - Holly Gramazio
The Word Is Murder - Anthony Horowitz
The Sentence Is Death - Anthony Horowitz
A Line to Kill - Anthony Horowitz
The Twist of a Knife - Anthony Horowitz
The Bookseller's Tale - Martin Latham
Network Effect - Martha Wells
System Collapse - Martha Wells
Artemis - Andy Weir
The Glass God - Kate Griffin
Project Hail Mary - Andy Weir
The Song of Achilles - Madeline Miller

Favourites
1. Project Hail Mary - Andy Weir: I got this because I enjoyed the Martian and this one is even better. Science-heavy, surprising and with an engaging central character.
=2. Network Effect - Martha Wells: Frankly, the whole Murderbot series has been great, but of the two full-length books, I preferred this one. Engaging, fast-moving and I love the central character. This is more at the space opera end of sci fi.
=2. The Husbands - Holly Gramazio: This is one of the most thought-provoking, yet entertaining books I have read. A magic attic that provides different married life alternatives for the protagonist Lauren and shows how the rest of her life changes. Definitely recommended (and I'm planning to make it my pick for my bookclub).
4. Stray Souls - Kate Griffin: I think the best of her Kate Griffin phase (I met her writing as Clare North). It's something like the fifth book, but the others before it are also well worth it. It's London-based fantasy set in the present day. And there's a supernatural support group in it.
5. Moonflower Murders - Anthony Horowitz: I've read a lot of Horowitz this year, but I like this the best, in part because I like Susan the best of his protagonists. Interesting double detective story switching from a book detective (Agatha Christie like) to a life one (Susan).

Twelve novellas read for the first time.
Demon Daughter - Lois McMaster Bujold
When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain - Nghi Vo
On the Fox Roads - Nghi Vo
All Systems Red - Martha Wells
Vermeer to Eternity - Anthony Horowitz
What the Dead Know - Nghi Vo
Artificial Condition - Martha Wells
Rogue Protocol - Martha Wells
Exit Strategy - Martha Wells
Penric and the Bandit - Lois McMaster Bujold
Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory - Martha Wells
Compulsory - Martha Wells

Favourites
1. All Systems Red - Martha Wells: As above, the first Murderbot tale I read.
2. When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain - Nghi Vo: Like the Empress of Salt and Fortune this was well-written, engaging fantasy and not quite like anything else.
3. Penric and the Bandit - Lois McMaster Bujold: Solid Penric stuff, if not as good as some of them.

Nine computer games finished.
Home Safety Hotline
Ni No Kuni 2
The Case of the Golden Idol
Warhammer 40,000: Darktide
Firewatch
Tacoma
Steamworld Heist II
Incubus
Lord of the Rings: Return to Moria
Favourites
1. Warhammer 40,000: Darktide: This nailed the 40K atmosphere, the multiplayer was solid and fun. Also, not exactly beautiful, but excellent graphics.
2. Steamworld Heist II: Hatted bots saving the world in a turn-based strategy game that was fun, large and didn't require much computer space or power to run.
3. The Case of the Golden Idol: A rather good puzzle game that involves a lot of thinking and clues.

Twenty films I saw this year.
Marry Me
Ghostbusters: Afterlife
Orion and the Dark
The Lost City
Dune 2
Tales from Earthsea
The Lego Batman Movie
Paradise
Atlas
The Matrix Resurrections
Inside Out 2
Appleseed Alpha
Beverly Hills Cop Axel F
Glass
Bullet Train
The Adam Project
The Equalizer
Godzilla Minus One
Whisper of the Heart
Carry On
Favourites
1. Orion and the Dark: it had been described as Inside Out meets Being John Malkovich. The description was fitting and the film was great.
=2. Bullet Train: Thriller / comedy about a number of assassins who find themselves on the same Tokyo train. I would say it's not going to be on my best film ever list, but was unexpectedly watchable and entertaining (and apparently based on a book). Brad Pitt is a decent lead and has a good support cast. Also, cameos.
=2. Godzilla Minus One: This starts slowly, but turns into a very good film. Set in Japan around the end of the War and featuring the named massive monster.
4. Dune 2: Epic, cinematic. I didn't like it quite as much as I hoped, but still good.
=5. Inside Out 2: Not as good as the first, but worth a trip to the cinema.
=5. Carry On: Engaging, and I agree not as formulaic as some. Also a Christmas film. Die Hard isn't knocked off its pedestal, but at least this is something worth beating.

Eleven seasons of TV
Shadow and Bone - season 1
Altered Carbon - season 2
The Signal
Bodies
Yu Yu Hakusho
Fool Me Once
Cowboy Bebop
Supacell
1899
Travelers - season 1
Arcane: League of Legends

Favourites/ordering
1. Bodies: It involved multiple interesting characters, various mysteries and time travel. I wasn't too sure for the first two episodes (and there was a lot to follow), but got really hooked on the next two. Five and six were also great, then the penultimate episode was a bit poor but the ending was good. I particularly liked that the four main leads were all police officers in different time periods.
2. 1899: It's weird and has isolated seavoyage / ghost vibes. It was supposed to be three seasons, but was cancelled. It's from the creators of Dark and I would say is better and weirder. I think cautiously recommended - the questions in the first season are mainly answered - but you end up with a set of new questions at the end.
3. The Signal: A German science fiction mini series about an astronaut and her family. It was an interesting premise and good characters. I think it was also the right length for its story, so recommended.
4. Supacell: A British superhero television series set in modern-day South London. It is about a group of five ordinary black people, unified by family history of sickle cell disease. This was the “origins” equivalent of Heroes and quite good – but I found it hard to get into the story initially.
5. Cowboy Bebop: A live action series based on the 1998 Japanese anime television series. Interesting, sadly only ran to one season, but I liked the characters and the atmosphere.


So, 2025? Less kitchen work will be good and I already have several plans and arrangements lined up. I'm feeling cautiously hopeful.

Farewell 2024.
lathany: (Default)
A trip to Kew with Bea.



Holly Walk.
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We saw a Banksy on the way to Kew - my first.



Kew itself was quiet as we went early. Always good to wander around.

Kew

Apr. 19th, 2024 03:31 pm
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Dom and I went to Kew today.

lathany: (Default)
We went to Christmas at Kew for the first time this year.



Lights, trees, food and loaded alcoholic hot chocolate (rum, cream and marshmallows).

Kew

Nov. 17th, 2023 03:02 pm
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At Kew today.



The weather was great, the Christmas at Kew displays clearly ready for the evening and the cakes a bit substandard and expensive.

Kew

Oct. 13th, 2023 03:02 pm
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Today, having a day off work I finally made it to Kew (having failed in August because of the weather). The Met Office forecast promised that the day would improve and it did.



However, Kew was almost deserted other than school parties. I had a cream tea late morning.

Kew

Apr. 10th, 2023 07:50 pm
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I had afternoon tea with Liz at Kew today.

lathany: (Default)
- Sunday 30th I met Liz at Kew, seeing her in person for the first time in two years.
- Errant ran yesterday and it now occurs to me that we should really check back in with the dig site.
- I've been playing a lot of Phoenix Point but, wuss that I am, on a nice safe difficulty level.
- I'm now on Spotify and was delighted to find the Secret World soundtrack on it.

At Kew

Oct. 24th, 2020 11:55 am
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Kew gardens, sunny and mild.



A bad journey home, but a good day.

Kew

Jun. 9th, 2020 03:45 pm
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Today we visited Kew.

It had reopened with social distancing. We found that there was plenty of space in the car park first thing (although it was full when we left - although there were spaces in the road beyond). It was quiet, although I would say roughly equivalent to mid-week in January. There were a couple of pop ups by Victoria Gate selling ice cream and coffee. There was a queue for the ladies toilet.



Overall - it was lovely to be there. We were lucky with the weather and it was simply wonderful to be in a large park.

Kew

Aug. 22nd, 2019 10:57 am
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Yesterday, we went to Kew Gardens for a rather greener, nearer day out. As per usual, we started with coffee and cake (the cake was fine - but rather smaller than we wanted or remembered from trips in earlier years).

The weather was excellent, though, sunny and not too hot.



We visited the Japanese Garden, Temperate House, the Walkway and Sacklers Crossing.
lathany: (Default)
Last night we went to Kew Gardens and saw Garbage.

There were two support bands as well. Sleeper which Dom knew (he commented that one of their tracks sounded a bit like Blondie and then their next track was a cover of Atomic!). The other support band were Du Blonde, new to both of us, but really good.

It was a really great evening. I particularly enjoyed Bleed Like Me, Paranoid, Only Happy When It Rains and Stupid Girl. We were very lucky with the weather - it didn't rain, it wasn't too hot and it wasn't too cold.

The full Garbage setlist was (having looked it up on line):
Control
#1 Crush
Stupid Girl
Temptation Waits
Wicked Ways (Personal Jesus)
No Horses
Dumb
Special
Blood For Poppies
On Fire
Empty
Vow
Bleed Like Me
I Think I’m Paranoid
Push It
Only Happy When It Rains
Even Though Our Love Is Doomed


Encore:
When I Grow Up

(And apparently Matt Walker on drums due to Butch Vig Illness)

Last time we saw them I'd hoped they would play Bleed Like Me which is probably my favourite, but they didn't. So it was good to hear it this time.
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On Maundy Thursday, Emma was in London for the launch of her fourth book in the Planetfall series (called Atlas Alone). It was an evening event at Waterstones. I arrived early and had a cream tea in the basement cafe. Then the book launch itself had wine. It was called Titans of Sci-Fi: Alastair Reynolds, Emma Newman and Temi Oh in conversation with Pat Cadigan and involved the four authors up on stage talking about their books. It was really good to see Emma again and particularly nice that she was also pleased to see me. I bought her and Temi Oh's books and got them signed.

The Sunday before we travelled as a family to Kew to meet with Chris V, Krys and Emilia.



It was a good day. We had decent weather and Emilia was mostly well-behaved. We had lunch at Ask and generally pottered around.
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Over half-term, I arranged time out with Bea and Ryan. In Bea's case, this was breakfast at Ole and Steen", some shopping and the Natural History Museum. My main take-home from the latter was to never go in the school holidays again. Although the sea cows were good.

Ryan and I went to Kew.



It turns out that the Orchid display had just started, so we queued for that.



We also went to the cinema - a rare outing of all four of us - and saw Alita: Battle Angel. This was set in the future and based on an anime series. Alita is a cyborg and the film follows her reawakening and interactions with the human society now around her. It's a decent film - but I felt that it didn't finish. It just stopped. There will be sequels - this was not a surprise to me.

Finally, we finished the third season of Agents of Shield. This was watchable and fun. I don't think I liked it as much as the first season, but it did finally finish some arcs that have been open for a while.

April

Apr. 21st, 2018 01:34 pm
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It's been quite a while since I wrote reviews of anything. So, I'd better fix that.

Also, a quick mention of my Easter week off. I went to Kew with Ryan (plus cake) and to Staines for shopping with Bea (plus waffle and pizza). Both days went very well and we chose the two days with decent weather. I don't have any shopping pictures, but here's a Kew one.



Over Easter Dom, Bea and I went to see Black Panther. I enjoyed it, but wasn't quite as blown away by it as pretty much everyone I've seen reviews from. In part, because my expectations were high and in part because I didn't know the source material. Dom did know the backstory and was much more impressed with how they had dealt with a cliched and racist background without throwing it all away.

I'm reading my way through my birthday books, two down and two to go.
  • Want You Gone by Chris Brookmyre: It's a rather nice Jack story that also deals with Buzzkill and internet hacking. Worth a read, although possibly after the other Buzzkill/Jack stories (Dead Girl Walking and Black Widow).
  • Sixth Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko: The sixth, and possibly last, of the Night Watch series. I thought this was a rather sad ending to a series that started well. Also, I do wish that the author would stop bringing people back from the dead and put more effort into creating new characters. Overall, not very impressed.

There have also been a couple of games.
  • Wasteworld: This was a new roleplaying game that Martin wanted to try. It's a post-apocalyptic game in a future controlled by AIs with touches of Paranoia. I think it was an interesting background, but would like to see more before saying much about the system.
  • Earthforce: Dom ran the first session of his superheroes one-off series. This featured John, Jon, David and Georgia. I really enjoyed it, but won't say much more as others will be playing.

So, overall, April's not been a bad month, although it definitely picked up when the weather improved.
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Last Monday I joined colleagues from work at HintHunt near Euston station for an hour long escape room. They have two rooms and the premise of my one was: "A crime scene investigation where a private detective (JM) has found a dead body in his office and he has been wrongly accused of murder. The police have sealed off the office and you have managed to gain access to the crime scene. You only have one hour to find the evidence and clues to wind up with case, prove JM’s innocence and find your way out of the locked room!"

I thought that the game was an excellent way to spend an hour. We did manage to escape with 1 minute and 37 seconds to go, although we needed hints galore (although, apparently, so does everyone else). Thoroughly recommended and, one day, I'll try the other room.

It being half-term, I took a couple of days off - Wednesday and Friday. On Wednesday I mainly used it to relax and enjoy not having to commute or work. On Friday I took the family off to Kew for the day.

We saw this year's Orchid display which, despite this photo not showing people, was very crowded.



The weather was lovely and sunny and the gardens looked beautiful.



We also saw some peacocks on our travels.



On Friday evening, we did pancakes ([personal profile] bateleur was out on Tuesday evening). Savoury ones with bolognese sauce and then sweet ones. My favourite was my last which I did with chocolate-and-caramel spread, a touch of maple syrup and some brandy.

Also on Friday, I started playing Goetia, a ghost game that I finished today.



It's an interesting puzzle game, although with a somewhat gloomy atmosphere. If and when my GameFAQs review is published, I'll link to that from here.
lathany: (Default)
Today I took Ryan to Kew. This was the counterpart of Wednesday's shopping trip.

We started with The Hive, although it was already quite busy.



From there we headed down to the Pavillion for cake (he had blueberry and lemon and I had banana and coconut).

Next was back to Palm House.



Then we went to the Treetop Walkway.



We also managed the Princess of Wales conservatory and Sackler Crossing. At some point we found this.



Then we headed home for a late, small lunch.

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