Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Monday, 4 April 2016

Olfactory Observations with Lizzie Ostrom




I love perfume. I love it as much as a person on a pretty stringent budget can – I usually can’t afford it, thusly, I love to read about it. I spend an inordinate amount of time trawling on fragrantica.com, and if I’m honest I feel that my profile there is the most revealing profile of myself on any social media forum. I think knowing that I *will* wear Autumn/Winter scents in Spring/Summer, that I am definitely not above wearing Britney Spears Midnight Fantasy, and that I suffered an addiction to Yves Saint Laurent’s Opium during my formative years is pretty much all you need to know about me.

Perfume can say a lot about a person – about their real or imagined selves, or at least whether or not you could stand being in a tight space with them.
In Lizzie Ostrom’s Perfume: A Century of Scents, you learn that it can say a lot about people in a much broader sense – politically, socially, geographically and more. As a harbinger of cultural developments and nuances, perfume is convincing and enthralling. Via a selection of 100 perfumes spanning 1900-1999, Ostrom waxes philosophical about their meaning, function, and creation and there is some interesting and still very relevant content – for instance, the façade (and ensuing mark up!) of ‘natural’ products (newsflash: a lot of toxic chemicals are natural), the cult of the celebrity and the ever-present devices of the advertising industry – how it has changed, and how it really hasn’t changed.

As a cultural investigation, it is impressive. But it’s also just fun to read, especially if you’re like me and are a person who loves perfume, and finds themselves asking strangers “Are you wearing Kenzo???” or slightly unnerving them by guessing which scent they’re wearing (I do this to patrons frequently, I’m not sure if they’re actually unnerved but I will definitely suggest Ostrom’s book to them in the future).

Whether you grew up during the 40’s and wore Madame by Rochas, or the 70’s when Jovan Musk was all the rage, or the 90’s when everyone wanted to smell fresh and preppy and loved Tommy Girl (memories of walking down Jervois Road with my mother as child come flooding back whenever I smell this!) – I think you will enjoy it. I remain heartbroken that Cacharel’s LouLou didn’t make the list, but I am willing to forgive.

Enjoy! And P.S - isn't Lizzie Ostrom gorgeous??? You can marvel at her here.


 




Friday, 21 March 2014

Reality Bites: An Indiana Jones Fantasy

In the AU of my life - that's Alternative Universe for those not in the know - I'd like to think that I was writer or a bookstore owner or even maybe an archaeologist.

Like Daniel Jackson from Stargate, a space traveling archaeologist or even better Bernice Summerfield from Doctor Who, a space traveling, time traveling archaeologist.

I can see myself now, covered in dust and grime, uncovering some amazing galactic discovery that would change the universe with a handsome bad boy space captain by my side.  You know the kind, the one with the sexy grin and the snarky attitude.  Hey it's my fantasy after all and if you're going to dream why not dream big.

Since I'm not an archaeologist or even a historian I have to settle to watching others.  Those that can't... watch or something like that.  And let me tell you there are some amazing documentaries around, so if you're like me and are something of a history buff with a secret yearning to carry a bull whip and act all Indiana Jones then why not check out some, if not all, of the titles below.

Vikings presented by Neil Oliver

The world of the Vikings has always intrigued me, maybe because I have my very own Viking, so learning about these warrior people was something I've always wanted to do.

Even better, presenter and archaeologist Neil Oliver really knows his stuff and makes it all come alive.

A History of Scotland by Neil Oliver

Not only an archaeologist, Neil Oliver is also a Scotsman so it was probably only natural that he would do a documentary about the land of his birth.

Personally I could listen to him all day just for his Scottish accent alone.  A man with brains and a sexy accent. Pretty much a winner really.

Andrew Marr's History of the World

A fascinating look at some of the lesser well known aspects of world history with some insightful parallels made between the past and what is happening in today's world.

This is history through a journalist's eyes and well worth watching.

Beneath the Sands : Ancient Egypt Revealed

Egypt.

Land of the Pharaohs. The Spinx. Lost treasures and curses. Death on the Nile

Agatha Christie is totally to blame.

Although I could do without the death & murder part.  The 1920's clothes on the other hand...

Origins of Us

Archaeology is much more than the history of the world.  It is also the history of us.

Where did we come from?

Why are we the way we are?

How did we evolve?

Mankind The Story of All of Us 

The History Channel is made for people like me.  I could, if I had the time and the access, pretty much watch it all day.  Luckily I don't because death by history overdose might just raise a few strange queries.

Instead I can drip feed myself all courtesy of the libraries dvd collection.

The Crusades

Knights and swords and battles, The crusades is an era of history that captives the imaginations of many.

It was also an era that was bloody and brutal and with no true winner and the outcome of this echoes throughout history right up to today, with the implications effecting both the West and East and all over one little city, Jerusalem.

Monday, 13 January 2014

Adolf in Blunderland


Adolf in Blunderland: a political parody of Lewis Carroll's famous story by James Dyrenforth and Max Kester

This book. Oh my! It is something that I discovered on our wonderful blog "Treasures from the Basement" and I am so pleased to have stumbled upon it. Auckland Libraries is one of only two libraries that hold this book in New Zealand (the other being Dunedin public library). I have searched online for a copy to purchase but have only been able to find second hand (as it is out of print) copies, with the lowest price being around $60 ! I have seen copies going for more than $100 too - this book is hot property !

It is hilarious and very, very pointed. It is a radio script from a BBC play that was broadcast in October 1939, but the hard copy version of it includes some extra parts that were deemed to be inappropriate by the BBC for airing. It is also a rather disturbing read in light of what occurred in the years following, the devastation of which no one could have predicted

The story follows Alice's adventures, as Adolf encounters the same characters she did, with some slight differences.

Some of my favourites are the Mad Hatter becoming the Mad Flatterer; the Doormouse is the Doormat - representative of the German population(!); the Mock Turtle is Mock Gurbles; the Caterpillar is Neville Chamberlain, allowing Adolf to take his choice of bites out of the mushroom cap in order to make him big again, with the cap resembling a map of the world.

Adolf in Blunderland is a great laugh but it is also chilling to think of the destruction to quickly come, one which the authors could certainly not have predicted.

If you are an Alice fan, or a political cartoon fan, or a history buff, or just enjoy a laugh, you must read this!

Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Time travel on a budget

I've often dreamed of travelling back in time and meeting some of my favourite historical characters. As well as having the pleasure of conversing with the most interesting people in history (Elizabeth I, Jane Austen and Voltaire, to name a few), you'd come across as awfully clever. "The New World? Why yes, I've been there twice...Not a patch on the Antipodes, you know."

However, lacking the money to pay for a trip on the Virgin time and space shuttle, I do the next best thing - read stuff about history.

For me, this often comes down to historical crime fiction, but of course there are other genres out there. If you have an interest in history, this list of new and forthcoming novels might just tickle your fancy.

The Copper Sign - Katia Fox
England 1161: Ellen, a blacksmith’s daughter, wants to become a swordsmith, but for a girl this is unimaginable. She disguises herself as a boy and runs away to accompany a famous swordsmith to Normandy, where the sons of the greatest barons are trained to be knights. As "Alan", she learns the trade and becomes familiar with court life. When she falls in love with Guillaume, a young nobleman, she can’t divulge her secret for fear it will endanger her dream of fame and recognition. Across countries and time, Ellen struggles to achieve her dream and find her place, always in fear that Thibault, an evil knight who tracks her every move, waits around the corner.



Under the Cherry Blossom - Maya Healy
Hana and Kimi are delighted when their heroic uncle, Hidehira, arrives at their palace, along with his dashing army of Samurai soldiers. He is their father's right hand man, who helps him govern the land on behalf of the Shogun. So when Hidehira and his army slaughter their father and elder brothers, it is a harrowing betrayal. As the palace burns around them, Hana and Kimi have to fight for their very survival. Now the whole country is searching for them - and anyone who helps them will be put to death. The girls must disguise themselves and find somewhere to hide, while working to avenge the brutal wrongs done to their family...Book one of four.



The Stockholm Octavo - Karen Engelmann
18th-century Stockholm. Emil Larsson is a drinker, card player and contented bachelor until he is told that his position at the Office of Excise and Customs depends on his settling down and finding a wife. Mrs Sparrow, proprietor of an exclusive gaming house and fortune teller, offers to lay an Octavo for him - a form of cartomancy which can divine his future if he can find the eight individuals who can help him realise his vision. But quickly matters spiral out of Emil's control. No longer just a game of the heart, collecting his Eight is now crucial to pulling his country back from the brink of rebellion and chaos.



Death's Door - James R. Benn
When Lieutenant Billy Boyle's girlfriend, British spy Diana Seaton, is captured in the Vatican, he insists on being assigned to a local murder investigation. An American monsignor has been murdered at the foot of Death's Door, one of the five entrances to Saint Peter's Basilica. The fact that the Vatican is neutral territory in German-occupied Rome is only one of the obstacles Billy must overcome, including how to get in. He must navigate Vatican politics and personalities - pro-Allied, pro-Nazi, and steadfastly neutral - to learn the truth about the murdered monsignor. And just a short walk from the Vatican is the Regina Coeli prison, where Diana is being held...


The King's Spy - Andrew Swanston
Summer, 1643. England is consumed by civil war. Quiet bookseller Thomas lives in a rural village with his widowed sister and her two daughters. Until a stranger knocks on Thomas's door one night and informs him that the king's cryptographer has died. Aware of Thomas' background as a mathematician and expert in codes and ciphers, the king has summoned him to his court in Oxford. It is only once Thomas arrives, however, that he learns that his predecessor was murdered. Murder follows murder. And when a vital message encrypted with a notoriously unbreakable cipher is intercepted, he must decipher it to reveal the king's betrayer and prevent the violent death that defeat will surely bring.


Nine for the Devil - Mary Reed
The year is 548 and Empress Theodora is dead of disease. Or so everyone in Constantinople, capital of the Roman Empire, believes. Everyone except Emperor Justinian, who orders John, his Lord Chamberlain, to find her murderer or suffer the consequences.









The Crown - Nancy Bilyeau
When Joanna Stafford, a young novice, learns her cousin is about to be executed for rebelling against Henry VIII, she runs away from Dartford Priory. But when she and her father are arrested and sent to the Tower of London, she finds herself a pawn in a deadly power struggle. Those closest to the throne are locked in a fight against those desperate to save England's monasteries. Joanna and a troubled young friar, Brother Edmund, are sent to find a hidden relic believed to possess a mystical power that has slain three Englishmen of royal blood in the last 300 years. One that traces all the way back to Golgotha and the Passion. Joanna must determine how far she is willing to go to protect her life and her country.


The Red Sea - William Napier
1571. For hundreds of years the Ottoman Empire has ruled the seas. But the seas are only a gateway to the lands they covet beyond. The armies of the Turk are picking off colonies and small islands, and if the Mediterranean falls, then finally perhaps the balance of power between crescent and cross will tip...Now, as the sun rises on one October day, history will be written in blood. Countries all over western Europe have sent ships and men. Caught up in it are Hodge and Ingoldsby - two young English adventurers who have survived the siege of Malta and are already living on borrowed time. Now, it seems the debt must be repaid.



The Mirrored World - Debra Dean
Born to a noble Russian family, Xenia falls in love with and marries Andrei, a soldier and singer in the Empress's choir. But then a tragic vision comes true, and a shattered Xenia descends into grief. Turning away from family and friends, she begins giving all her money and possessions to the poor. Then she mysteriously vanishes. Years later, dressed in the tatters of her husband's uniform and answering only to his name, Xenia is discovered tending the paupers of St Petersburg. Revered as a soothsayer and healer, she is feared by the new Empress, Catherine. In this tale, Dean reimagines the intriguing life of Xenia of St Petersburg, a patron saint of her city and one of Russia's most mysterious and beloved holy figures.

Shadows on the Nile - Kate Furnivall
1932, London. 27-year-old Jessica Kenton's stable life is torn apart when her younger brother, Timothy, vanishes. Vowing to find him, she follows Timothy's trail to the lush and exotic lands of Egypt, but she doesn't expect the danger she is confronted with. There are powerful people who do not want her brother found, and not everything is as it seems. There is also a love waiting that will tilt her world on its axis. By the author of The Russian Concubine.






And if none of that is quite enough, you may have to try this:

Build Your Own Time Machine - Brian Clegg
Brian Clegg provides an understanding of what time is and how it can be manipulated. He explores the remarkable possibilities of real time travel that emerge from quantum entanglement, superluminal speeds, neutron star cylinders and wormholes in space. With the fascinating paradoxes of time travel echoing in our minds will we realize that travel into the future might never be possible? Or will we realize there is no limit on what can be achieved, and take on this ultimate challenge? Only time will tell.