Blogroll
- A book you might like This is a book you or someone you know might like.
- Bat, Bean, Beam Everyone links to Giovanni Tiso’s blog but I don’t care. It’s too good.
- Elliot Scribblings Londoner Elliot Elam sketches people on public transport.
- Five Dials Five Dials is free online magazine edited by Craig Taylor, who seems to be a genius. In Five Dials no. 32 you can read a piece I wrote about Katherine Mansfield’s birthplace.
- Isinglass Martin Edmond’s wonderful blog.
- Let Me Be Frank Sarah Laing’s compulsively readable cartoony blog on reading, writing, parenting, angsting.
- Oliver Burkeman My favourite writer on self-help. He really hates “The Secret”.
- The Animalarium This blog gladdens the heart. Celebrates animals (worldly and otherworldly) in illustration and design.
- The London Review of Breakfasts Dinner parties are mere formalities; but you invite a man to breakfast because you want to see him. (On the LRB, I have reviewed as Egg Miliband.)
- The Subversive Copyeditor Carol Fisher Saller is my editing hero.
- The VUP blog I work as an editor at Victoria University Press, and this is our blog.
- Twitter Poetry Night I ran a project where you could listen to people on Twitter reading poems.
I’m on Twitter sometimes
- RT @sarahlovescali: I could not stand idly by and allow young people to say they are the only ones who have suffered from Karens I could no… 1 day ago
- RT @TheSpinoffTV: The Friday Poem: The Writing Life by Harry Ricketts thespinoff.co.nz/books/06-12-20… 3 days ago
- A priest has written a sermon about one of my poems. I am pretty happy about it dbhamill.wordpress.com/2019/12/01/adv… 6 days ago
- I wrote (a wishful) column about the ending of the age of the nemesis (with apologies to Roxane Gay, whose work I a… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 1 week ago
- RT @JeromeChandra: @FreyaDalySad If two poets kiss is that called having a pashleigh young 1 week ago
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Latest posts
Desk drawer
Tag Archives: London
An ordinary mind on an ordinary day
For instance, when hearing a loud metallic sound outside at night and realising that the cat is to blame, you probably wouldn’t say to yourself, “The cat has knocked the dustbin over.” Instead, you might just say, “The cat,” since that utterance contains all the information … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Andrew Irving, Charles Fernyhough, cloud, inner voice, London, running, Vygotsky
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