A final note on Crime Fest: If you have the opportunity to see Simon Brett perform his one-man multiple-character play “Lines of Enquiryâ€, don’t pass it by. Forty minutes of silliness and high drama, performed in a variety of accents—oh, and it’s all in verse. His characters are played by Osbert Mint, Betti Morns, and…
Read MoreThe dinners at crime festivals are a tricky affair. To rubber chicken, or not to rubber chicken, that is the question. I generally toss a coin in the air and let it decide, but in this case I’d promised the organizer Adrian Muller (married to my UK publisher, not coincidentally) that I would be around…
Read MoreThe past two days I have been in Bristol for the first annual Crime Fest, a festival that grew out of the visit of Left Coast Crime two years ago to the left coast of Britain. This is a small conference compared to BoucherCon (and you all have your registrations in for Baltimore this October,…
Read MoreI have seen the future of travel, and it is…retail. I sit in the terminal at Newcastle upon Tyne, a shopping mall that happens to have airplanes around the edges.  I have been in two airports so far in the UK, Heathrow and now this, much smaller, one, and the difference between these UK…
Read MoreIn his introduction to one of the later short story collections, “Dr Watson†(ie, Arthur Conan Doyle) tells his readers that Sherlock Holmes has retired to Sussex, where he is keeping bees. The Sussex home is the setting for one of the stories narrated by Holmes himself, “The Lion’s Mane.†So when this compiler of…
Read MoreA punt is a boat designed to take goods such as cabbages and chickens to market, pushed with long poles along the shallow bottoms. In the Oxford area, one punts from the end that is not built up, standing on the boards that line the bottom of the boat (which one can lift to bail…
Read More What I love about England, or travel in general, is the unexpected. Just when you think all the world is the same, everyone eats McDonald’s burgers and drinks Starbuck’s lattes, you find that McDonald’s sells beanburgers in rational countries and that Italy, the home of the espresso machine, regards lattes after breakfast as rather…
Read MoreSorry, the Tana French book is In the Woods, not Into. And good as it is, it didn’t keep me from sleep for long last night. I don’t do jet lag, but there’s no denying that when one spends a night on the plane and then has the better part of a day to get…
Read MoreThe British Airways plane to London seemed to be fighting for every inch of progress against a head wind that tossed and played with the big jet, so that sleeping in the First Class Pod (you always suspected that LRK was a pod person, didn’t you?) was a bit like sharing a bed with a…
Read MoreI take off today for 21 days in England and Scotland, where I have eight signings, a three-day conference, and research at opposite ends of the country (the top and bottom ends, not side-to-side.) Because I had a whole lot of miles accumulated (I use my British Airways credit card to pay for absolutely everything)…
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