sunday links

I’ve not posted any Sunday links for a while and the fact that I’m doing so today is a sign that I have at last been able to claw back for myself a few waking hours that are not entirely taken up with work or moving (I’m not complaining, but it has been an extremely full-on few months). Before I share some things that I’ve been enjoying watching and reading and listening to lately, I feel compelled to show you some of my dahlias, whose showy blooms are bringing me a ludicrous amount of happiness right now.

This one – tartan – is probably the most ludicrous of all, with its huge plate-sized stripey flowers and notched petals . . .

. . . I’m also very fond of this one – muchacha . . .

. . . and this one, which produces soft multi-petalled pastel spheres and is called peaches . . .

. . . but I have to say that this one – mystic dreamer – is my favourite dahlia this year. It was the first one to flower, and (with regular dead heading) just keeps on going whatever the weather. It has lovely chocolate coloured foliage and its delicate variegated flowers (each of which is different) look lovely in a vase. I confess I was also seduced by the glorious excess of this gigantic variety, which I’ve put in a large pot outside the front door. It’s more than a metre tall already and beginning to come into bud. I have staked it and am really looking forward to it flowering (I’ll show you when it does)

each mystic dreamer bloom is slightly differently striped!

And so, on to the links! Here are a few things to accompany your knitting:

Tom and I both really enjoyed Amanda Kim’s Moon is the Oldest TV, an insightful and entertaining documentary about Korean video artist Naim June Paik, whose creative and generous work, was in many respects, ahead of its time. Highly recommended.

Like many of you, I suspect, I’m actually enjoying following the twists and turns of the forthcoming United States election at the moment: a completely novel experience, which for this UK listener has been greatly enriched by the Ezra Klein show. Listening to Klein’s recent interview with Tim Walz, I was very struck by two things: first, that Walz is a man who is completely comfortable with his own feminism (surely just what’s needed in this ticket’s prospective VP?) and second, that Walz possesses a gift that now seems to be very unusual among politicians on either side of the Atlantic: of being able to respond thoughtfully, intelligently and apparently completely spontaneously and naturally to difficult questions covering a wide range of complex social issues and policy matters (rather than speaking in repetitive, over-choreographed soundbites). I also really enjoyed this recent episode about the gender politics of the forthcoming election, and (on a less political but no less pertinent topic) this one about attention and its contemporary resonances. Are there any other political / cultural podcasts you’d recommend? Tell me about them!

Speaking of feminism (and the politics of the family), I have been greedily devouring each of the Celia Fremlin novels that have recently been reissued by Faber & Faber. Fremlin’s wry and highly entertaining books have an unusual approach to crime narrative and “women’s” fiction. With their claustrophobic settings, and familiar post-war British landscape of bedsits, boarding houses and sinister lodgers, Fremlin writes a very distinctive kind of domestic noir, with intriguing feminist underpinnings.

Fremlin’s best known book, The Hours Before Dawn is genuinely completely brilliant, but I’d also heartily recommend Uncle Paul, The Long Shadow and Appointment with Yesterday, all of which have been reprinted. If you prefer audiobooks (to which you can knit while listening) the readings by Claire Corbett on audible are excellent.

Whatever you are reading, or watching, or listening to, or knitting this Sunday, have a good one!


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