For all those who get the winter blues. The solstice is past. Here comes the sun.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muFOeZSIC2U
For all those who get the winter blues. The solstice is past. Here comes the sun.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muFOeZSIC2U
This is disaster. What will I do on my day off??
I may have to consider returning to America after all.
I worked for Border Books for 10 months Kelvin. Helped clean and stock those now empty shelves. To see the store like that is awful. I love the feel and smell of a new book, and the idea of using an electronic book fills me with horror. To browse slowly, and then to make my choice of reading material is so much better and satisfying than ordering on line, and quicker.
I suspect we must cherish our public libraries far more than we have done hitherto if we wish to retain the browsing experience.
I have tried to cherish my public library, but it is so full of computers, and the only place to read/write/ think is a round table by the door, so I had to retreat to the Beanscene instead.
For those of us who don’t live near the Mitchell, where are the good ‘local’ libraries?
Well, I know I am spoilt by having the largest public reference library in Europe on my doorstep.
What I meant by cherishing local libraries was probably that we need to tell those who fund them what we want from them.
There is a consultation going on in England about it, and Rachel Cooke writes about it in a recent Observer.
The closure of the Glasgow branch is sad news indeed. The Fort Kinnaird branch in Edinburgh has been declining for a while, but even a year or so ago Borders in Glasgow was a great bookstore.
Apparently Borders has been starved of funds over the past few years, forced to promote potboilers to make up for lack of investment. There’s some hope for good high street book stores if you look at Blackwells in Edinburgh, which I think has got even better in the last couple of years. And, further afield, Foyles in London: they refurbished recently and it’s just fantastic. Models for the future, hopefully.
I agree that Foyles’s refurbishment is a triumph. Howevrer, I still think that the idea of the big bookshop is probably going to be so rare that it will be like Wembley Stadium or Edinburgh Zoo. Of national note rather than local significance.
The noise level in my local library is such that I cannot think at all – and I’m used to a noisy family around me. In Borders today – incredibly depressing. It was so so much better than Waterstones. But Waterstones is better than nothing. But then again, I use Glasgow University Library more than anything else.
Standing Committee convener tells us that this is a good time to begin to reshape our priorities again from a zero base.
£2 Million lump sum has been paid into the pension scheme as part of the rescue plan.
St Serf’s Care home has been transferred to new ownership. Tribute is payed to the Synod Office staff and Ian Stewar for their work on this. Monies previously leant to the home have been returned to the church and will subsequently appear in accounts.
Raspberry Rabbit has some nice pics of worship and also a link to the Primus’s Charge. http://raspberry_rabbit.blogspot.com/2010/06/primus-charge-primus-charge-to-general.html
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