A reread for this book, after I was inspired to get it down from the shelf after reading Luther Arkwright recently. I first read this way back in 2008 and reviewed it here. It's such a dense and meandering tale that it stands revisiting and there were definitely sections that I'd completely forgotten about over the years. The artwork is as gorgeous as ever and I'm glad that I have a physical copy, given that they seem to sell for a fortune nowadays. The Kindle version for £10 looks like a bargain though and probably easier to navigate than the hefty hardback tome.
Dogwood Tales
Sunday, March 01, 2026
The Worst Person in the World
A Norwegian romantic comedy drama is probably not the genre that I would gravitate towards, but this critically acclaimed film from Joachim Trier did pull me in bit by bit.
The story revolves around Julie, a young woman approaching her 30th birthday and unsure of what direction she wants her life to take. She starts by switching from her medical degree to psychology before deciding that what she really wants to be is a freelance photographer (and maybe a writer). She starts a relationship with Axsel, a comic artist who is fifteen years older than her and keen to start a family, an idea which fills her with horror (especially after spending a weekend with Axel's happily settled friends with children).
While walking home from a publishing event, she gatecrashes a wedding and meets a barista called Elvind with whom she feels a connection. She starts daydreaming about him before breaking off her relationship with Axsel to be with Elvind instead. During this time she also examines her relationship with her divorced parents, seeing a pattern of broken or unhappy marriages through the years, and also has a psychedelic experience that confronts her fears of becoming a parent and aging.
I would hesitate to call this a comedy and it's not really romantic either, but it does capture something of the uncertainty that is part of moving from your twenties to your thirties when life suddenly seems all too real.
Nebraska Live
A coda to last week's viewing of Deliver Me From Nowhere was this live performance of Nebraska, filmed simply in Black and White with an equally stark musical arrangement that captures the original spirit of those bedroom recordings from over 40 years previously. Bruce's voice has aged, not surprisingly, but it feels like he has grown into some of these songs with the added depth adding emotion to classics like Nebraska, Mansion on the Hill and Highway Patrolman. These could well become the versions of the songs that I turn to first now.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Friday, February 27, 2026
Gris-Gris by Dr. John
The cover to this album made it look like this might be some sort of voodoo zombie themed novelty record, but it proved to be a lot more interesting than that first impression. Dr. John (a.k.a. Mac Rebennack) was a session musician from New Orleans who was working with Sonny and Cher, when a gap in the schedules gave him some studio time for himself.
He put together a band and recorded this glorious mix of swampy R&B and creole rhythms that really does evoke misty bayous, moonless nights and something strange lurking in the darkness.
Swamp-tastic!
https://album.link/gb/i/106225386