Aircrew Memorial, Braemar

In the background of my first photo of Braemar’s War Memorial can be seen another memorial which features an aircraft engine:-

Aircraft Engine Memorial, Braemar

This is from a Vickers Wellington aircraft which crashed near Braemar in poor weather on 19/1/1942. All 8 crewmen died.
The memorial is dedicated to them and to all othe aircrew who died in the Cairngorms:-

Vickers Wellington Aircraft Memorial, Braemar

Lower plaque, dedication to those Commonwealth aircrew who lost their lives over the Cairngorm mountains:-

Braemar, Aircraft Engine Memorial Plaque

 

Crosstalk by Connie Willis

Gollancz, 2016, 506 p.

Briddey Flannigan is a woman under pressure, in her work at Commspan, a phone app company apparently a rival to Apple, with her Irish-descended family, with her boyfriend Trent Worth. She is deluged by work and family emails and seemingly rushed off her feet. All this makes for a breathless introductory chapter showcasing the author’s signature style of scenes or dialogue interrupted by events, constantly breaking off to deal with something else.

Not that the pace slows much thereafter. In a Willis novel things do seem to cascade, with incident piling on incident, misunderstandings and crossed wires, things forever on the point of being resolved only to be diverted onto other paths.

Briddey’s sister Mary Clare is an overbearing, overprotective parent to her daughter Maeve. Her other sister Kathleen, as Briddey once was, is constantly being urged to marry a “foine Irish lad” by their Great Aunt Oona who, despite not being a first or even second generation immigrant, speaks using Irish syntax and rhythms.

Boyfriend Trent meanwhile while wants her to undergo with him a procedure to fit an EED, a device which will enhance ability to sense a partner’s feelings and thus bring them closer together. The EED “creates a neural pathway that made partners more receptive to each other.” Notwithstanding their relationship, Trent from the outset is a somewhat aloof, absent figure, whose speech does not carry any conviction of affection.

Briddey is at pains to keep any hint of getting an EED away from Commspan gossip Suki, while in the works basement C B Schwartz, nicknamed the Hunchback of Notre Dame, toils away perfecting the latest app.

An unexpected gap in the EED surgeon’s schedule bumps Briddey and Trent up the queue for operation. It is then disaster strikes. In the aftermath, Briddey finds herself telepathic. Worse, it is C B, not Trent, whom Briddey can hear in her head.

Still worse, Briddey is soon to be overwhelmed by a tsunami of unexpurgated thoughts pouring into her head from people round about. Only C B’s aid and tuition in protection from the racket, building in her head perimeters and safe rooms, helps her survive. This involves a kind of technique C B compares to Hollywood star Hedy Lamarr’s invention of a frequency-hopping device to frustrate radio jamming by the Germans of Allied torpedoes. (See here; paragraph 2.)

In one of their conversations about the desire to communicate (or lack of it) C B tells her, “If people really wanted to communicate, they’d tell the truth, but they don’t,” and the phrase “‘Of course’, is a dead giveaway that you’re lying.”

He has been able to receive and broadcast for a long time and has done a lot of research. Hearing voices in your head is not a survival trait, he tells her. It didn’t do much for Joan of Arc after all. He has been worried about her for a while since he knew that telepathy is to do with the haploidgroupgene R1b-L21, the Irish carry. He himself was adopted hence the non-Irish name.

It is clear very early on where all this is going in terms of a “normal” plot. The SF and scientific aspects are merely window dressing. This is actually a romcom.

Diverting enough, though.

Pedant’s corner:- a missing comma  before a piece of direct speech, “and rounded the corner and breathing in the sweet smells of grass and wet earth” (doesn’t need the second ‘and’,) “about Joan of Arc being captured by the British” (it was the English she was captured by. It long predated the formalisation of the UK,) octopi (the plural is octopuses; or octopodes if you’re Greek.)

Braemar War Memorial

A Celtic Cross sited near the Clunie Water:-

Braemar War Memorial

Closer view:-

War Memorial, Braemar

Dedication and names:-

Braemar War Memorial Dedication and Names

Some Kind of Grace by Robin Jenkins

Polygon, 2004, 230 p, plus 4 p Introduction by James Meek. First published 1960.

Like Dust on the Paw, this is a fruit of the author’s time in Afghanistan, and paints a portrait of the country in the late 1950s, some of its people yearning for modernity but with pockets of utter poverty in its most rural areas.

Our viewpoint character is a Scotsman only ever named as McLeod, a diplomat between posts, returned to Afghanistan after a time away. In his previous term there he had formed an attachment to Karima, an Afghan woman he had thought to marry. However, he did not own the many thousands of sheep her father deemed necessary in a prospective son-in-law.

He is interested in the fate of a former friend, Donald Kemp, who has gone missing along with his female companion, Margaret Duncan. The authorities are anxious to convince him they were both murdered: indeed, a village has been punished for the crime, with two of its men in jail in the city awaiting execution. McLeod has his doubts and, against the wishes both of the authorities and the diplomats sets out to see whether the pair are still alive. In the village concerned he finds, “as everywhere in this country, a mixture of pathos and sinisterness.”

A local Commandant confides in him and in their conversation compares the Bible and the Koran. “‘Everything is in it that suits you. If you wish to kill your enemy, search through the pages, and you will find sanction. If you wish to forgive him and love him like a brother you will find sanction for that too. A man takes his choice of what God advises.’”

About the human condition McLeod thinks, “No wonder the Koran and the Bible, advising human beings, had to give such contradictory advice.”

Despite being set in Afghanistan this is unmistakably a Scottish novel. On the journey McLeod’s thoughts compare the landscape to parts of Scotland such as Edinburgh Castle and the mountains of Wester Ross, he thinks of a local headman as glaikit, hears a voice call to him in Gaelic, and also remembers Margaret Duncan’s parents referring to the bad fire.

Yet its conclusions and themes are universal.

(There are occasional references reflecting the times it was written, one boy at a school is “slant-eyed,” another “hooknosed, Semitic.”)

Pedant’s corner:- In the Introduction; Jenkins’ (x 3, Jenkins’s.) Otherwise: brief-cases (briefcases,) basket-ball (x 2, basketball,) Chiang Kaishek (usually written Chiang Kai Shek,) “he had to breath …. through his mouth” (breathe,) “hair-pin bends” (hairpin.)

In Braemar

While walking through Braemar after visiting the showground I spotted this (kit-built?) car:-

An Old Car in Braemar

In Braemar. A Kit Car?

The bridge in the photo immediately above is over the Clunie Water. Videos below:-

Friday on my Mind 247: Don’t Make Me Over

This wasn’t a hit in the UK but was Warwick’s first in the US.

It’s a typical early sixties kind of song.

Here’s a TV appearance from 1963.

Dionne Warwick: Don’t Make Me Over

 

The Return of the Soldier by Rebecca West

In Virago Omnibus II, Virago, 1987, 90 p plus 9 p Introduction. First published in 1918.

On reading this I remembered watching a dramatised adaptation of the story at some point in the past. Not that it mattered: only the broad outlines were familiar and it’s the detail that counts.

Our first person narrator, Jenny Baldry, lives at Baldry Court at Harrowweald with Kitty, the wife of Jenny’s brother Chris. Life there is saddened by both the absence of Chris, away at the Western Front, and remembrance of his dead son. Thinking of Chris Jenny tells us of “That detached attention, such as an unmusical man pays to good music, which men of anchored affections give to attractive women.”

Jenny’s and Kitty’s relatively tranquil existence is disturbed by the visit of Mrs William Grey, once Margaret Allington, with the news that Chris is in hospital, not physically injured but suffering from shell shock (not actually named as such in the book and in any case now known as PTSD) and has lost his recent memory. He is convinced that he is in love with Margaret, whom he met over fifteen years ago and spent time with (remembered idyllically by him) at her father’s Inn at Monkey Island on the Thames, and only seeing her will satisfy him. His wife and son he remembers not at all.

The narrative is taut and claustrophobic, all three women’s behaviour restricted by the manners of the time, but notable for its focus on women affected by the Great War rather than the traumas of the trenches.

It’s also a little overwritten – and tinged by snobbishness “Wealdstone … the name of the red suburban stain which fouls the fields three miles nearer London than Harrowweald,” “‘I fancy it’ll do for a person with that sort of address,’” “the doctor (a very nice man, Winchester and New,)” with a touch of racism (“little yellow men”.)

As in that dramatisation the resolution seems a bit trite and too easily achieved.

Pedant’s corner:- plus marks for ‘rhododendra’, a missing comma before a piece of direct speech, “with her head one one side” (on one side,) “cottage ornée” (cottage orné,) “She brought the punt across the said very primly” (across then said,) “‘something here that many interest you’” (that may interest you,) “I slid off the tree-truck” (tree-trunk makes more sense,) “to staunch a wound” (it’s ‘stanch a wound’.) “For it we left him in his magic circle there would come a time” (For if we left him in.)

 

Latest for ParSec

The Measurement Problem by David Whitmarsh arrived recently.  My latest review book. This will be for ParSec 16.

Mr Whitmarsh is new to me and is (according to the book blurb) the Science Museum SF Debuts Prize Winner.

We’ll see how things work out.

Braemar Games Arena

After Crathie, our way home took us through Braemar; so of course we had to stop for a look at the famous Braemar Gathering showground, home of one of the most famous Highland Games events.

Off to the side of the approach road is the Braemar Highland Games Centre along with the J S Milne Gallery:-

Braemar Highland Games Centre

Attached on the other side of the J S Milne Gallery is the Kauffman Exhibition Hall and Braemar Royal Highland Society:-

Building at Braemar Games

Arena entrance gates:-

Braemar Games Arena Gates

Looking back to entrance gates from arena:-

Braemar Games, Gates and Stands from Arena

Stands:-

Part of Arena, Braemar Games

Royal Pavilion:-

Braemar Games, Royal Pavilion

Uncovered seating:-

Arena for Braemar Games

Braemar Games, Part of Arena

Scottish Cup Draw

It’s that time of the year again. Well, this season we’re in the draw a little earlier due to being in Tier 4 rather than 3.

Anyway it seems we’ve got a home tie in Round Two against Tayport of the Premier Division of the Midlands League, which at the moment lies at Tier 6 of Scottish football; two levels below the Sons.

That league is relatively new, only being formed when the clubs of the former Scottish Junior Football Association joined the senior football pyramid.

Since Tayport FC  are an SFA licenced club (if they weren’t they could not enter the Scottish Cup) they are likely next season to enter the new Lowland League East Divison when the present Lowland League expands to two divisions, though I’m not sure if the promotion criteria have yet been firmed up.

The tie is a potential banana skin, as they say. Home advantage ought to favour us but our home record has been very poor this calendar year. Only two wins I believe. We’ve certainly lost two out of four games at home in the league this season and only won one.

The game will be played on the weekend of October 25th, most likely on that day.

 

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