Philip Spires commonplace book

I have kept a commonplace book for many years. It's a place where scraps of impressions are filed for future reflection. It's not a diary, it's just a mental scrapbook, concentrating on book reviews, concert reviews, visual arts and some occasional pieces on travel. It is also a place where I occasionally reflect on what I write. Details of my books can be found at http://www.philipspires.co.uk

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Something of a disappointment - Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

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Something of a disappointment It is not often that a novel comes to hand that has been prized, praised and pre-inflated. Half of a Yellow Su...
Sunday, July 22, 2007

Advice to aspiring writers. A speech at the awards ceremony for the Libros International Children’s Writing Competition. 20 July 2007

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Like the students who entered this competition, I started writing when I was quite young. I wrote a lot of poetry in my early teens. I wrote...
Sunday, July 15, 2007

An orchestral concert 14 July 2007, Festival – Nits de la Mediterrania, La Nucia - Twentieth Century Ballets

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The final concert of the inaugural La Nucia arts festival took place last night. Starting at 10:30pm, it was staged in the town’s recently c...
Saturday, July 14, 2007

A review of Arthur and George by Julian Barnes

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George Edalji (that’s Ay-dal-ji, by the way, since Parsee names are always stressed on the first syllable) is the son of a Staffordshire vic...
Friday, July 13, 2007

Mission - a review by David Holiday

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It's hard to believe that this is a debut novel. The writer Phillip Spires is a master at his craft and after buying the book I visited ...

Mission - a review by Timothy Harman

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This is a beautifully crafted book, rich in sensuous language evoking a flavour of Africa. The structure of the book is most unusual, with e...

Mission by Philip Spires - a review by Cao Duc Thac

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Budget airlines have made travelling far easier in recent years and many of us have enjoyed holidays in exotic places: on safaris in East Af...
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About Me

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philipspires
I was born in Wakefield and was brought up in Sharslton, a mining Village. I went to London University and then became a maths teacher, working initially as a volunteer teacher in Kenya. I spent sixteen years in London, in Balham and Islington. In 1992, I left Britain for Brunei and then Zayed University in Abu Dhabi. I currently live in La Nucia, near Benidorm in Spain. I am interested in the relationship between nature and nurture, birthright and experience. Themes of culture and identity and their relation to economic and social roles underpin my writing. What we are born into relates to what we become, but we are rarely in control. What others do, our interests and intellects and the way we choose to earn a living, all of these shape us into what we become. It may be that culture is the sum of all assumptions that others make on our behalf, whereas identity represents our reactions to them. I did a PhD on the effects of education in economic development in the Philippines. I was President of Alfas del Pi Music Society for twelve years.
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