Through the Chair
I work out of the spare bedroom, so it’s not ideal – there is a wardrobe behind me that I do my level best to ignore, and we are not allowed to put up anything on the walls unless there already is a nail there (and they check this, the pedantic so and so’s). See, ideally I would like more pictures on the wall, more colours around me, but heigh ho. This flat came with furniture, so I happily appropriated our old dining table and chair to work on – they are both made of solid wood and are huge and heavy. I cannot sit straight to save my life, so am forever twisting about forgetting the chair does not, and end up with a ton of bruises – that table is not forgiving. I have speakers, and whenever am stuck I play a range of music that I have on the computer. Next songs up are Rod Stewart (Maggie May), The Kinks (Waterloo Sunset) and various Slade tunes - I know these sort of tunes so well that they are comforting and I can work through them, as well as sing along every so often.
To the right of the computer I have my printer, on top of that is my Top Twenty book (I like to listen to music from the month I am writing about if possible), and some research books. Propped up is my Flower Fairies of the winter book, invaluable for a bit of chilly garden research. You can hardly see it, but my chapter plan is beside my mouse, I mostly resist the urge to rest my coffee cup on it, although a few tell tale circles beg a different story.
And that is all the story this picture tells us, I could widen the camera's gaze but then you would see untidy stacks of research, tons of books banked against the wall, a sort of glitter glo-lamp thing that spins around, and my collection of old annuals, books and records. See, where I actually write is sort of the boring bit...
2 comments:
What a tantalising glimpse! Actually your desk is the neatest currently on record looking at the Guardian site and my own!
Also - ah! Waterloo Sunset, possibly the most evocative song ever committed to vinyl, I always get a bit misty eyed when I play it - it just reeks of 1960s England, a place that doesn't really exist any more. Sigh!
PS thanks for adding a link to my blog. Much appreciated.
I know - I was going to try and get in the whole room and then got shy! And really, the most important thing in here is the heater :)
I love Waterloo Sunset, for the same reasons you do. Such a perfect song.
I read somewhere that (in a way) it was a blessing for music that The Kinks couldn't go to America in the 60's (there was a reason at the time they weren't allowed in, not that I can recall what) and because of that they focused in on life around them, and gave us such gorgeous songs as Waterloo Sunset.
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