Tuesday 19 February 2013

Water

Pictures to follow!!

I’ve met a few people over the years who sat they are drawn to water. Many of us say we don’t drink enough water, many of us are drawn to lakes, rivers or the seaside to enjoy leisure time. The other day when it was cold and bright I spent an enjoyable lunchtime walking down by the river in Cambridge. When I moved down from Scotland in 2002, it literally took me years to get over not being close to the mountains. My house was 40 minutes drive away from Loch Lomond. I walked nearly 50 of the Munro’s (and a pretty select 50 too!!) and then seriously got into landscape photography and the lochs played a big part in my foreground interest.
 
But over the last few years I have come to realise that Cambridgeshire is a rather wonderful place to live. From the city itself through to St Ives, Wimpole Hall, Ely, Fen Drayton Nature reserve, St Neots, Paxton pits and even up to the coast at Hunstanton. There is lots to enjoy and little to complain about, and I don’t ……………….. anymore!
These pictures were taken on a lovely lunchtime walk along the River Cam. Even urban cityscapes can come to life with a bit of the wet blue stuff!

Monday 18 February 2013

Where I work


Pictures to follow................
 
I’m really lucky in many aspects of my life; in fact, let’s face it, pretty much all aspects of my life.

One of them is where I work, what I do and whom I work for. My company are pretty awesome really. On the back of my PhD and previous experience in pharmaceutical research I now have an exciting and stimulating job, working with a group of great people, allows a little travel and pays well.

But beyond the “walls” of work the surrounding area is quite nice too. I have a nice safe place to run where the floor is very level and there is limited traffic, allowing me to zone out if I want. And whilst I used to take time to walk around the park as part of my lunch break the running has taken over so I rarely do that now. But in an attempt to take a few more pictures I threw my camera bag into the car the one day a few weeks ago when it was very bright and cold and managed to capture some decent images of the surrounding area. In years or decades to come these will act as a good reminder!!

Wednesday 13 February 2013

The Faceless by Simon Bestwick




Interesting this one, and I’m not quite sure how much I liked it even 24 hours after finishing it!!!

The story is essentially of an evil family who brought mutilated war hero’s back to a local sanitarium after the first world war but used their suffering for their occult purposes. After all this had dies out a pedo ring with occult tendencies rediscovered what was going on and managed to harness the powers of the previous horrors for their own uses. The story centers on one individual who is a tv psychic. His show is made up but he does have the sight and is eventually tricked back to the home town as the final part of the jigsaw to allow all of the “spindly men” (the dead and deformed soldiers who usually have to wear masks as they suffered facial damage) back onto this plane. In the end all hell breaks loose and the goodies fail to stop the oncoming onslaught (this makes a refreshing change!) and everybody bails out of the country as it is consumed with evil only for the one remaining heroin to take flight to Europe with her unborn child. However, she may hold the ability to reverse things!! Set up for a sequel?

Good, but at times frustrating, especially towards the end. However, after a little while and the dust settles I’m now thinking that was actually better than I thought whilst reading it.

Thursday 7 February 2013

Lee Childs - Jack Reacher - The Killing Floor

Thought it was about time I gave Jack Reacher a try. There’s a bit of hype about the film coming out this year, although why you would get someone as short as Tom Cruise to play somebody who is supposed to be 6 ft 2 I’ll never know!! Kate (and her Dad!) seem to have read them all up to the most current as well so I felt like I was missing out a little. Apparently, the early ones are the best and towards the end of the series the quality drops off as it seems the author is just on a mission to get a novel out every year. I had recently read The Innocent by David Baldacci, in which he introduces John Pullman, a hard man services investigator, arguably a bit of a copy of Reacher, and I liked Pullman quite a lot. So, this novel starts out with an unbelievable coincidence. Reacher just happens to get off a Greyhound bus and walks for miles through the rain to a town where unbeknown to him, his brother was murdered a few days ago. As he eats his breakfast in the diner he is arrested and taken to the nearby prison for the weekend along with the softy banker who seems to be linked somehow. The banker is in fact a central figure in a counterfeiting scheme based on the town and after lots of people are brutally murdered whilst Reacher figures things out he eventually gets to kill all the bad guys, including he who blew away his brov. A decent novel it rolled along quite nicely without ever having me racing back to my Kindle. I liked the writing style and found it all quite enjoyable really, but it would n’t make my top ten. I think I prefer John Pullman to Jack Reacher but I'll read more of both.

Saturday 2 February 2013

Florence

I'm a lucky boy, more work travel on the horizon. This time, a week in Florence :-) I'll be there for a conference from the Wednesday to Sunday, well actually I'll miss the last day to travel back to avoid missing another night with my kids but I'll also be there on the Tuesday for a one day seminar on medical imaging. It will be March by then so I should see some sun. I've just been on Tripadvisor and booked the second most popular hotel in city (the most popular was a 40 minute walk from the conference centre!). So, now I just need to find a way to upgrade my three year old Panasonic GF1 camera before then ........ if only I could decide what exactly I want!!!!