Yesterday, a rocket was launched into space, which we watched with Wolfie, who was absolutely fascinated. I will blog about his newfound love of rockets and space exploration later, but right now let me merely mention that everytime I hear of a space shuttle, or anything to do with astronauts, I remember that episode from The Simpsons (back when they were good of course) when Homer went into space, in Deep Space Homer. More specifically, this scene with Kent Brockman, where he mistakenly thinks hiant ants from outer space have taken over the ship and are about to invade earth. I always laugh when I see it, in more than 25 years it never gets old:
Blogue d'un québécois expatrié en Angleterre. Comme toute forme d'autobiographie est constituée d'une large part de fiction, j'ai décidé de nommer le blogue Vraie Fiction.
Sunday, 31 May 2020
Le pommetier en fleurs
Photo du pommetier familial prise par mon père récemment. C'est notre pommetier. Un pommetier en fleur, je trouve que ça fait très printannier, et comme le printemps se termine aujourd'hui (je considère qu'après mai, c'est l'été), j'ai pensé le partager aujourd'hui. De tous les arbres qu'on a chez nous (je veux bien entendu dire "chez mes parents"), c'est je crois mon préféré. Et plus tard dans l'année, quand les pommettes sont mûres, il est encore plus beau. Mais enfin bref, mai se termine aujourd'hui, alors ce sera sans doute la dernière photo du mois de mai sur ce blogue.
Saturday, 30 May 2020
The magpie
I mentioned two weeks ago that I kept seeing a magpie in our street, just on and around the neighbour's front lawn. I managed to take a picture of it yesterday, albeit not a very good one: I had to crop it quite a lot to be able to make it visible. As I said in my last post, magpies are the first sort of birds I noticed when I first moved in England. I always loved them, their distinctive colours, which I always found soberly elegant. So anyway, this is our new little winged visitor, a cute little magpie.
Chimère de gerberas
Friday, 29 May 2020
The treasure in the woods

Crêpe aux bleuets
Thursday, 28 May 2020
Joe Cool

Le retour des hirondelles?
Mon père m'a appris une nouvelle assez intéressante hier: il y a des hirondelles qui ont visité les cabanes à oiseaux installées chez mes parents. Bon, ça n'a l'air de rien comme ça, mais il se trouve que ça me ramène à un souvenir d'enfance: nous avons hébergé des familles d'hirondelles dans les mêmes cabanes à oiseaux quand j'étais jeune, les premiers oiseaux après les moineaux dont je me rappelle avoir appris le nom. Ça doit faire des années que l'on n'en a plus, alors je serais vraiment content si mes parents en reprenaient comme locataires. Si cela devient le cas, j'espère aussi pouvoir partager des photos desdites hirondelles sur ce blogue.
Wednesday, 27 May 2020
The Little Bookshop in Cookham
Sometimes, I find things by chance. Or my wife does and tells me. Anyway, she found out recently that there is an independent bookshop in Cookham, which is not too far from where we live. It is aptly named The Little Bookshop and indeed seems quite small and cosy in the pictures I saw online. It has been open since November 2018. I think last time we went to Cookham was some time in March 2018. In any case, I intend to visit the bookshop as soon as possible. So there is something else to look forward to.
Notre sentier près de chez nous

Tuesday, 26 May 2020
Dracula Day

Quoi faire avec du riz et du colorant?

Dragons, imagination and RPGs

Les siestes de Domino

Monday, 25 May 2020
Bank holiday Monday
This Monday is a bank holiday, the second bank holiday of May. And, thanks to the current pandemic and the lockdown, I barely remembered. So far I have been accomodating myself with the current situation fairly well, probably because I am somewhat of an antisocial. Nevertheless, I cannot help finding it sad that a bank holiday Monday just looks like every Monday nowadays.
La Bouquinerie réouverte

Sunday, 24 May 2020
Craving sticky toffee pudding

Les truites
Mon père est allé pêcher récemment sur le lit de mes oncles (ses frères) et il a attrapé des truites. Ce n'est pas une pêche miraculeuse, mais assez pour se nourrir. Et c'est bon, la truite. Et rien qu'à cause de ça je partage la photo.
Saturday, 23 May 2020
The rainbow of the Wallingford Bookshop
La hutte de castor
Friday, 22 May 2020
Wolfisms
Wolfie is now the author of many small little expressions that are very cute and that I have coined "Wolfisms". I have decided to share them on this blog. Here are a few:
-His mother: "It's time to tidy up/have lunch/take your bath/go to
bed/etc." Wolfie: "OK, but but but the problem IS..." (A long,
convoluted explanation is given as to why whatever we want him to do
cannot be done at the moment follows.)
-"I'm hungry lots of times!" to mean he is hungry and wants more food than he received.
-"I want trucks a minute": I want to watch my truck program for as long as I please.
I will share more in future posts.
-"I'm hungry lots of times!" to mean he is hungry and wants more food than he received.
-"I want trucks a minute": I want to watch my truck program for as long as I please.
I will share more in future posts.
L'expatrié et les autres
Hier sur Facebook, un ami que je n'ai pas vu depuis des décennies m'a contacté et s'est mis à me poser des questions sur où je demeurais et tout le reste. Je dois sans doute d'abord faire une mise en contexte: uand je dis un ami, c'est plutôt une connaissance qui fréquentait la même gang que moi du temps où j'étais adolescent, bien qu'on se connaisse depuis qu'on est enfant. Nous n'avons jamais été très proche. Bref, il ne semblait pas savoir que je vis en Angleterre. Ses questions m'ont fait me questionner moi même sur les perceptions qu'ont les Québécois de moi, surtout ceux qui m'ont connu quand j'étais plus jeune et qui m'ont perdu de vue. Je me demande donc si je ne suis pas devenu un truc exotique pour eux, un marginal. En fait, je crois que même à l'époque j'étais considéré comme marginal et que pour beaucoup de connaissances, ça a confirmé un peu ma marginalisation.
Thursday, 21 May 2020
Have we missed a storm?
We have been having quite hot days recently, by any practical means it looks like summer has started. The good thing about it is that we have plenty of free time to enjoy the hot days. The bad thing about it is that I don't like hot days and I don't enjoy them all that much, especially when we have many hot days. But I was hoping for the thing to cool down as they were forecasting an electric storm today. This generally makes the temperature drops a few degrees after that. And I also happen to love storms, one of the aspects of summertime I prefer. But for whatever reason, they are not forecasting storms anymore for today. Which disappoints me quite a lot, as I was looking forward to it. I hope it shows up today or soonish, but I'm afraid we have missed the storm.
Des vraies fèves
Wednesday, 20 May 2020
Hypnos
This picture comes from the Facebook page of the British Museum. It is a Roman sculpture based on a Greek original representing Hypnos, the Greek god of sleep. The caption said that: "his wings allowed him to move swiftly over land and sea, and to fan the foreheads of the weary until they fell asleep. His son was Morpheus, the personification of dreams." So Hypnos was pretty much the most useful Greek god, especially for insomniacs like me.
Le temps suspendu
Tuesday, 19 May 2020
First chips
Tigres et vacances

Monday, 18 May 2020
The Bullet Train
Retrouver l'Auberge
Sunday, 17 May 2020
Revisiting Treasure Island
I first read Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson ten years ago. It was one of these books I kept wishing to read, but always waited for the right moment to read to fully appreciate. You need a lot of free time, ideally during a holiday. If I discovered the novel itself as an adult, I was familiar with the story since my childhood: I first read a pop-up book adaptation (this one) bought in Montreal when I must have been six or seven. The plot had been reduced to a skeleton of itself, but the main characters were there and it got me into pirates, treasures and it influenced a lot of our make belief games, especially during summertime. Then there was a Japanese animated series back in the 80s which my brothers and I really loved, even though the pirates, even Long John Silver, had turned into physics defying ninjas. I was eagerly waiting for every new episod. Then, years later, I bought this edition of the original novel when I first came to England.
It actually took me ten years to read it, which is pretty shameful. What struck me about the novel is that it can be read as proto crime fiction of the hardboiled kind, espcially at the beginning. All the pirates showing up at the Admiral Benbow, looking for the map that will lead them to the MacGuffin, it's all very common to modern crime fiction, if you think about it. Just like is the search for the treasure, where the investigation and the interaction between the characters more important than the resolution. Now I will not reread the novel any time soon as I have so many new books to read, but I have rediscovered the old animated series and I intend to binge watch it soon. I have seen the first two episodes and with all its flaws, it is still very solid entertainment.
It actually took me ten years to read it, which is pretty shameful. What struck me about the novel is that it can be read as proto crime fiction of the hardboiled kind, espcially at the beginning. All the pirates showing up at the Admiral Benbow, looking for the map that will lead them to the MacGuffin, it's all very common to modern crime fiction, if you think about it. Just like is the search for the treasure, where the investigation and the interaction between the characters more important than the resolution. Now I will not reread the novel any time soon as I have so many new books to read, but I have rediscovered the old animated series and I intend to binge watch it soon. I have seen the first two episodes and with all its flaws, it is still very solid entertainment.
Une grue empaillée

Saturday, 16 May 2020
Mysterious log with eyes

Quoi faire avec de la rhubarbe

Friday, 15 May 2020
One for Sorrow...
In the last few days, I kept seeing a magpie in the neighbour's front lawn. when I first came to England, this is the first bird I noticed, as I had never seen one where I come from. I took a fancy in them, in spite of their bad reputation, they just look so nice and elegant. I tried to take a picture, so far I have not been able to. Anyway, thankfully I'm not superstitious, as my wife taught me yesterday that there is a nursery rhyme about magpies which can be quite ominous: "One for sorrow / two for joy / Three for a girl / Four for a boy", etc. I have seldom seen more than one magpie together and as far as I remember never more than two at the same time.
Les mains propres
Bon,
se laver les mains, ce n'est pas le problème. Avant la pandémie, je me
lavais les mains fréquemment, je le fais encore plus maintenant. Mes
mains sont propres et si j'attrape COVID-19 par les mains, ben j'ai
vraiment ce que j'ai pu. Non, le problème, c'est que mes mains sont
maintenant devenues très sèches. Pas sèches comme du papier-sablé, ce
n'est pas assez fort. À peu près comme le désert de Gobi et je ne pense
pas que j'exagère. Mais bon, au moins j'ai les mains propres, c'est toujours ça de pris.
Thursday, 14 May 2020
Happy birthday Cate the Great!
Today is the birthday of Cate Blanchett, AKA Queen Cate or Cate the Great, as if you are a fan (or a Blanchetter) you know. She is 51. I am not a fan of being a big fan of stars or celebraties, I am not really a fan of fandoms in general, so I don't hang around fanclubs on social media or elsewhere. That said, I am very much a fan of Cate Blanchett, because there are very good reasons to be a fan of Cate Blanchett. I consider her the greatest living actress, maybe the greatest actress who ever lived. And she got robbed of every Oscar she was nominated for but did not win (and a few others as well). I know I am hyperbolic today. Like I said back in 2018, I rarely worship, but with Cate Blanchett, I find it entirely justified. She is that great.
Adieu Renée Claude
Triste nouvelle hier: la chanteuse Renée Claude est morte de COVID-19. Je sais qu'elle n'était plus jeune et déjà très malade, mais c'est triste pareil. Je ne connais bien qu'une chanson d'elle, mais je la réécoute en boucle quand je l'ai en tête, alors même si je l'ai déjà partagée, je remets ici C'est le début d'un temps nouveau. Je me rappelle quand elle le chantait durant le référendum de 95, elle me donne des frissons depuis (je suis sentimental comme ça). Et je me promets d'approfondir mon éducation musicale québécoise et d'écouter d'autres de ses succès et de les faire découvrir à Wolfie.
Wednesday, 13 May 2020
Nostalgic Anonymous
Here is a joke about nostalgia, which is my permanent mental condition. It is not my joke, I am not sure where I heard it first or where it comes from, but it is funny because it is true (in my case anyway). So here it is:
"I was in Nostalgic Anonymous, but I left the group, because the meetings are not what they used to be."
I hope you enjoyed. Like I said, it is very, very, very me.
"I was in Nostalgic Anonymous, but I left the group, because the meetings are not what they used to be."
I hope you enjoyed. Like I said, it is very, very, very me.
Ma mère a vu un lièvre (ou un lapin?)

Tuesday, 12 May 2020
My wife won a cake


Nous avons vu un écureuil
En ces temps de pandémie, les trucs les plus bêtes deviennent des moments importants dans la journée. Toujours est-il que nous avons vu un écureuil courir sur la clôture qui longe les propriétés pas plus tard qu'aujourd'hui. Il était comme celui-ci, sauf gris et pas roux (hélas). Le tableau a été peint par une artiste locale et je le mets ici car il sert mon propos.
Chinese Dragon

Mai: où es-tu?
Bon, ben mai est assez rébarbatif ces temps-ci dans notre coin de pays: le maximum hier était de 15 degré. C'est assez facile de rester enfermé, mettons. Cela dit, je ne me plains pas: avec des vêtements chauds, j'ai eu une journée très agréable hier et j'ai eu beaucoup de plaisir à faire quelques pas dans le jardin. C'est plus automnal que printannier, mais j'imagine que ces deux saisons sont parfois des soeurs ennemies et qu'elles peuvent donc parfois se ressembler.
Monday, 11 May 2020
My reading strategy
It is a good idea during lockdown, since we should all have theoritically a lot of free time, to get on some serious reading. I have been reading more, but not nearly as much as I expected (or hoped). So I am setting up a reading strategy, that goes as follow:
-I must read whatever remains to be read on my bookshelves, not buy new books until the end of lockdown.
-Once a novel is finished, I must start another one the next day at the latest.
-I can read two other types of books (biographies, historical book, plays) simultaneously.
-I must try to finish whatever books I have already started in the past (mainly short stories anthologies) before the end of lockdown.
-I must make time to sit down and read.
-When in doubt as to what book start, ask Wolfie to choose for me.
So that's my reading strategy. What's yours?
-I must read whatever remains to be read on my bookshelves, not buy new books until the end of lockdown.
-Once a novel is finished, I must start another one the next day at the latest.
-I can read two other types of books (biographies, historical book, plays) simultaneously.
-I must try to finish whatever books I have already started in the past (mainly short stories anthologies) before the end of lockdown.
-I must make time to sit down and read.
-When in doubt as to what book start, ask Wolfie to choose for me.
So that's my reading strategy. What's yours?
Le mystérieux félin
L'année dernière, j'ai blogué sur un chat qui essayait de rentrer dans la maison. Je n'ai jamais su si c'était par confusion ou si simplement il veut se faire adopter par une nouvelle famille. En fait, je n'ai jamais su de manière certaine d'où il vient. Car il vient encore nous visiter, quoique ce soit de manière beaucoup moins fréquente. Il a mis les pieds dans le jardin il y a quelques semaines et n'a pas osé s'approcher de nous. Il ne se laisse pas approcher non plus. Chaque fois que je le vois, je me demande si ce sera la dernière fois. C'est le mystérieux visiteur félin du coin.
Sunday, 10 May 2020
Heineken 007

La Fête des Mères
Je voulais souligner la Fête des Mères ici en souhaitant joyeuse Fête des Mères à toutes celles qui lisent ce blogue. J'ai appelé ma mère sur Facetime et elle a pu voir son petit-fils, qui était un peu occupé à jouer, malheureusement. Pour ma femme, nous l'avons fêtée en mars, comme c'est le cas en Angleterre.
The Monster Game
My readers may remember from a post a few months ago the "Ghost Game"our little Wolfie plays from time to time. Well, this has evolved into the "Monster Game". The principles are the same: there is a monster nearby, an invisible one, and we must hide underneath the blankets in the bed otherwise the monster, which can roar and grunt but otherwise remains unseen, might eat us. He can start it at any time he fancies, generally during daytime (because daylight horror?) and it makes him scream and giggle in delight. I have to say, I really love it too. As a father, I am also proud of his imagination.
Des animaux de la lointaine Afrique
Photo prise dans le Derbyshire chez nos amis, je la partage ici car encore une fois elle sert mon propos (même si ça n'a rien à voir avec le Derbyshire). Toujours est-il qu'hier, notre fils a décidé soudainement de faire une carte à son grand-père maternel (son "daddad"). Il a donc collé des images d'animaux d'Afrique sur un carton plié en deux. Et il insistait pour que les animaux soient d'Afrique, cette terre très lointaine. Je ne sais pas quelle mouche l'a piqué, mais j'ai trouvé ça très mignon.
Saturday, 9 May 2020
I want a fedora
It has been fairly hot these last few days and it made me think of last summer when I wore a hat borrowed from my father-in-law. I was thinking that a hat could reallt be useful in the coming weeks and months, even though I am not really sure I have a head for hats. What I wore then was a Panama hat, but I thought it would be really nice to buy a fedora. I prefer it looks and shape, and also because its association with hardboiled crime fiction and film noir. But I have no idea of my head size and measuring it is always iffy if I cannot try the hat itself. So I am not comfortable buying it online (and I am being careful with how much I spend online as well these days). I will probably have to visit a shop to buy one, when the pandemic is over. In any case, I now know that I really want a fedora.
De la neige le 8 mai

Friday, 8 May 2020
Scones for VE Day

Faire notre propre pain?

Thursday, 7 May 2020
Imagination in a nutshell (and Snoopy)
We are soon going to celebrate the end of another war (at least in Europe), but today I thought I would share a comic strip from Peanuts with World War 1 as a backdrop (sort of). It made me laugh from beginning to end. You can see Snoopy and his brother Marbles. Some people have lots of imagination. Others, not so much. But when it comes to imagination, I am most definitely a Snoopy. And this strip is truly the story of many moments of my childhood.
Les poches d'un vêtement
J'ai une veste, enfin un jacket, que ma mère m'a donnée il y a dix ans. C'est un vêtement léger à porter une journée assez chaude mais pas trop, quand l'air peut se rafraîchir à tout moment. Assez pratique donc. Aujourd'hui, je me suis rendu compte pour la première fois qu'il avait des poches sur le côté. Ou alors j'avais complètement oublié. En tout cas, ça a été une surprise. Je me sens bête. Morale de l'histoire: ce qui est familier peut demeurer plein de surprises.
Wednesday, 6 May 2020
Krav Maga: the deadliest
My former Krav Maga instructor (and I only say former because I had to stop training when I lost my job three years ago, I want to to get back to it) recently shared this article on social media. They make a list of the ten deadliest martial arts and, as you would expect if you have ever practised it, Krav Maga came first. The number one, deadliest, most dangerous, badass martial art. Except that it is not a martial art (it has no ceremony, no code, no ranking per se), it is a self-defence system. Nevertheless, it beats all these other martial arts at what they claim they do. I can't help but feel a bit of pride, even though I still know very little about it and I am not very good at it. All the same, I am not quite clueless, I know enough to tell it is not a martial art and I hope I can train again one day.
Un plat de spaghetti tunisien

Tuesday, 5 May 2020
The crimes of MZB
I don't know why I started thinking about it, maybe because I blogged about Merlin recently. I originally came to the Arthurian legend via the movie Excalibur. It is what ultimately got me into becoming a medievalist specialized in Arthurian literature. For many people of my generation, they discovered the Arthurian legend through... The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley. I came across this book in college when one of my teacher got her class to read it. By that time, I had already read a few medieval Arthurian romances, so while I was far from an academic, I knew my stuff pretty well. So I plodded through the mists, and I... hated, hated, hated it. Even at that age, I could see the sheer stupidity of it: poorly researched material, using the Arthurian legend as a vehicle for neo Pagan, pseudo-feminist, modern mumbo jumbo. Characters and tropes were twisted beyond recognition and it was so very badly written. It was so bad it was vile. It was also rather creepy and distasteful when it came to sexual content. For instance, the author seeming to make an apology of the incest between King Arthur and Morgain that was going to produce Mordrer, depicting it as something mystical and noble.
While I was one of the few in my class to despise the book, I discovered in the following years that my feelings were shared by many medievalists. But it is only in recent years that I learned the truth about Mists and its author: Marion Zimmer Bradley allegedly raped and abused both her children and was complicit in the sex crimes of her husband. This came out in 2014, but I only found out last year. And this is why I think the novel is so despicable: because it does make apology of incestuous rape and sexual predatorism, and twists one of the greatest literary works of Western civilisation to defend a sick ideology. This is what infuriated me then, reading that rubbish book, and I did not even know the truth at the core of it. Bradley was a vicious monster, disguised as a terrible writer, hailed as some kind of brilliant writer of fantasy and neo Pagan guru. I am very sad for the many people she hurt, that said as a medievalist, I can't help but feel vindicated.
While I was one of the few in my class to despise the book, I discovered in the following years that my feelings were shared by many medievalists. But it is only in recent years that I learned the truth about Mists and its author: Marion Zimmer Bradley allegedly raped and abused both her children and was complicit in the sex crimes of her husband. This came out in 2014, but I only found out last year. And this is why I think the novel is so despicable: because it does make apology of incestuous rape and sexual predatorism, and twists one of the greatest literary works of Western civilisation to defend a sick ideology. This is what infuriated me then, reading that rubbish book, and I did not even know the truth at the core of it. Bradley was a vicious monster, disguised as a terrible writer, hailed as some kind of brilliant writer of fantasy and neo Pagan guru. I am very sad for the many people she hurt, that said as a medievalist, I can't help but feel vindicated.
Les stocks de spaghetti tunisien

Monday, 4 May 2020
Strange May
We have had so far a very strange month of May. Well of course you would say, but I am not talking about that strangeness. I mean that we are in the third month of Spring and it has been cooler and rainier than last month. Even when it wa ssunny, temperatures were in lower 10. If it wasn't so green around us, you'd think it was autumn. It certainly feels like another time of year. And I, for one, cannot complain. I prefer cooler, comfier temperatures. I just hate when it gets too hot. It is supposed to get warmer, but only later on this week. So I will enjoy the comfy weather while I can.
Les drôles de vacances
Comme je l'ai expliqué vendredi dernier, je suis en arrêt de travail pour tout le mois de mai pour cause de pandémie. Au moins tout le mois de mai, ça pourrait durer plus longtemps. Et nous ne pouvons guère sortir de la maison. Comme je demeure payé, je prends ça comme des vacances, mais des vacances où l'on ne peut pas voyager. Ce sera donc l'occasion de faire des tâches ménagères, mais aussi de prendre encore plus le temps de cuisiner, de lire, de regarder des trucs, mais aussi parfois d'en faire le moins possible. Parce que parfois, peu importe les vacances, c'est ce qu'on veut faire.
Sunday, 3 May 2020
Pazuzu

Notre passage secret
Bien entendu, en ces temps de pandémie et de distanciation sociale et de confinement, les actions les plus banales deviennent parfois excitantes, surtout quand on elles nous permettent de sortir de la maison, ne serait-ce que de quelques mètres. C'est ce qui arrive quand je vais sortir les poubelles et la récupération ou les rentrer. Et ça m'a fait redécouvrir le "passage secret" qui mène du jardin à la rue. J'ai blogué sur le sujet à quelques reprises, vous pouvez voir les détails ici. J'ai toujours été fasciné par les passages secrets quand j'étais enfant, j'ai en ai "inventé" quelques uns avec mes amis et mes frères: chez ma grand-mère, entre le terrain de deux de mes voisins, ailleurs aussi. Je suis heureux d'en avoir un nouveau ici.
"It never lasts long"
I was explaining to my mother that her grandson always sleeps better in our bed and rarely spend a whole night in his own. He still comes and joins us in the middle of the night, whether it is because he has nightmares or he simply wakes up. I do find it hard sometimes, as Wolfie takes a lot of space for somebody still small and he often kicks in his sleep. But my mother told me: "Enjoy it while it lasts, because it never lasts long. One day he will just stay in his bed and will not bother you and you will miss these moments." I keep it in mind every time Wolfie kicks me.
Pas de Marché français cette année
Tiens, ça m'est venu à l'esprit: le début mois de mai, c'est le temps où notre petite ville reçoit des commerçants français pour vendre des produits du terroir, surtout de la bouffe, pendant trois jours. Nous y serions déjà allé une fois, si ce n'était de la pandémie et de la quarantaine. J'aurais pu y parler français. C'est pour moi le moment important du mois de mai, avec la foire de la fin mai qui est aussi très plaisante. Ça nous sort un peu de notre quotidien. Pas cette année, il semblerait. Mais comme on n'a plus vraiment de quotidien "normal" de toute façon... Mais ça suce quand même.
Saturday, 2 May 2020
A taste for Mozart
Sometimes, you find sources of comfort and reasons to be grateful in the smallest things. A few weeks ago, I saw that I still had some Mozartkugels left in that box. (I had bought that box at reduced price in the local sweet shop, but that it another story for another time). In one bite,
with a bit of music (because you can't have one without music), I was
in back Salzburg or in Vienna where I first tasted them and everything was right in the world. Now they are all gone, it did not take me long to finish them. All the same, I still have the music of Mozart to enjoy. So I decided to share a bit of Mozart tonight with you. as it cannot be these chocolates. It is a piece of glockenspiel tune from The Magic Flute. Simple, yet a pure delight. You can find it in context on youTube, but here is the tune itself:
Le retour des chauves-souris

Friday, 1 May 2020
"No such things as too many books"

Le "carré" de sable
Ma femme a acheté à petit loup il y a quelques mois un "carré" de sable. Je mets le mot entre guillemets, parce que ce n'est pas vraiment un carré. Plus un truc de forme vaguement trianguaire/croissant en plastique monté sur des colonnes. Il se ferme sur le dessus et il a un parasol en plus. Je n'étais pas chaud à l'idée de l'avoir, surtout qu'il est arrivé des mois en retard, alors il a embarrassé le salon durant tout l'hiver. On a pu le sortir en mars. Mais depuis, il est devenu l'un des jouets préférés de notre fils et ça l'a encouragé à jouer dehors plus d'une fois. Alors en bout du compte, je dois admettre que ça a été un achat très inspiré.
Furloughed for May
I learned yesterday from HR that, due to the current pandemic, I and half the staff of our small company were being furloughed for the month of May and may be for longer. I cannot complain too much: I will keep most of my salary and was barely doing anything at work in any case. Now I will not have to phone it in. And I am quite happy to avoid any communication with the office for a month, as I have grown to hate my job before the pandemic even started. Being out of it completely for a month, but with some sort of financial security should be therapeutic. Especially since we don't spend much in lockdown. Anyway, whatever the future holds, furlough is the word of the day for this first of May.
Cadeaux de Tenerife
