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

Sunday, December 19, 2010

The Honorary Consul by Graham Greene

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Graham Greene’s The Honorary Consul is a deceptively ambitious project. And this applies as much to the reading of this great work as to its...
Friday, December 10, 2010

First Love, Last Rites by Ian McEwan

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Having read much of Ian McEwan’s later work in the last few years, I was intrigued to chance upon a copy of First Love, Last Rites, a set of...

The Telling by Miranda Seymour

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The Telling by Miranda Seymour is the life story, life confessions perhaps, of Nancy Parker. She is living out her retirement in a satisfact...
Saturday, December 4, 2010

The Rules Of Life by Fay Weldon

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The Rules Of Life by Fay Weldon aspires to the feeling of a full-length novel in the guise of a small novella. In less than 30,000 words, we...
Thursday, December 2, 2010

Monsieur or The Prince of Darkness by Lawrence Durrell

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Some decades ago I read Lawrence Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet and all his travel books. The term addict could easily have been an under-stat...
Thursday, November 25, 2010

How Long Is A Piece Of String by Rob Eastaway and Jeremy Wyndham

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If you have a couple of hours to spare and are intrigued by apparently simple problems that turn out to be more complex than they seem, then...
Monday, November 8, 2010

East West by Salman Rushdie

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East West is a short collection of short stories by Salman Rushdie. But there is nothing small or even limited about the themes they cover, ...
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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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