raven: [hello my name is] and a silhouette image of a raven (doctor who - time's up)
[personal profile] raven
I have four books on my bedside table: The Time Traveller's Wife, The Time Machine, Making History and... um... Doctor Who and the Daleks. I'm sensing a theme here.

Actually, I don't know how it's happened. I bought the Time Traveller's Wife weeks ago from Pritchard's, because we had one copy and I hadn't used my discount in a while. It's sat in its plastic bag on the windowsill ever since, waiting to be read. Making History is an old favourite; I read it over and over in Delhi over Christmas because it was the only novel I had. All the things I had in India at the time have become very familiar, because I read/listened to them over and over and over ad infinitum - the same thing happened to Snow Patrol's album Final Straw. I do love Snow Patrol; was into them before they were cool, natch.

Regarding the others, well. I went out yesterday with Hannah, on an actual expedition involving other human beings and social interaction. I still haven't got used to the no-exams thing; on Thursday afternoon I got off the computer in the end and sat downstairs with a glass of wine and a book. Simple pleasures, as I said later; I don't suppose I've done that guilt-free for two years and more. So, yesterday, Hannah and I took lunch out to the grass by St James's, and lay there looking at the sky for most of the afternoon, talking and making plans. The Lesbian Odd Couple are going to Skaros Skiathos the PLANET OF THE DALEKS a Greek island this week, which gave me an idea. All I really want to do is something fun, something spontaneous - although Hannah maintains I must be the only person who plans to be spontaneous. So, we're going to London for the day at some point, and we're going to do all the things we've always wanted to do together, like go up to Camden and eat ice-cream and spend lots of time in bookshops.

So. Fun stuff on the horizon. After we'd been to Lime Street to ask about it, I stopped at one of the small shops on the front of the station. It was a second-hand bookshop, one of the good things about the universe, and we spent much time just browsing and generally looking around. The books weren't in any particular order, which made it much more of a treasure hunt, and at length Hannah dug out Brideshead Revisited and I found an old Arthur C. Clarke novel and The Time Machine.

While we were paying for them, I asked on the off-chance if they had any of the old Doctor Who books. The two men running the shop were clearly enthusiasts, and told me they didn't have any, but there were two shops we could try. One is on Charing Cross Road - Hannah and I exchanged smiles; we can probably go up there when we go to London - and the other on Mount Pleasant.

[We should go there, actually; they mentioned that the bookshop owner has a life-size Dalek that shouts "OUT-OF-PRINT!" at people.]

So we hiked up Mount Pleasant, getting closer and closer to the university and so meeting lots of students. I was born somewhere round there, which is why I never wanted to apply here; there's got to be a rule against going to university in the same street you were born. Anyway, we found a shop - Reid's of Liverpool, and Hannah made the obligatory dreadful pun - and went inside. I immediately felt very short, as there were books from floor to ceiling, and some digging around yielded American Gods (which I have never read, and Hannah noticed the copy, while battered around the edges, had an unbroken spine and had probably been donated unread) and the first Calvin and Hobbes book, which made Hannah very happy. (She actually squeaked. I was amused.)

And then I made my off-chance inquiry again, and was directed to two entire shelves full of old Doctor Who novelisations, all somewhat battered. I sat down in geek heaven and went through, with Hannah helping me decide which ones I wanted with an expression that indicated she was amusedly humouring me. There were literally dozens to choose from, but I limited myself to ten quid's worth.

Therefore, I now own: Doctor Who and the Daleks, Doctor Who - the Aztecs, Doctor Who and the Five Doctors, Doctor Who and the Planet of the Spiders, Doctor Who and the Pyramids of Mars and Doctor Who and the Giant Robot.

And they are amazing. Old Target books, like the ones in the library when I was little, and they've been aimed at kids and have too many exclamation marks and use CAPS LOCK all the time and I am in awe. Actually, if you ignore the blurb, they are very readable and just so much fun. I love that I have the time to just sit in the garden and read them all.

I also had time to download and watch the first part of An Unearthly Child, which was so much better than I expected it to be (and hence the icon). More on that anon, as I want to give it its own entry.

And this is the life of me; fandom and summer, mostly.

It's fabulous.

on 2005-07-02 04:36 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] bekkypk.livejournal.com
The TARGET novelisations are pretty good :) I've got about 20 of them somewhere. Theres so many we tend only to get the episodes we liked though.
(I have a lot of peter davison's doctor ones)
xx

on 2005-07-02 10:41 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
I'm really enjoying them. Don't have any Peter Davidson ones except the Five Doctors, which is all shiny and caught my eye.

on 2005-07-03 06:41 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] bekkypk.livejournal.com
Ooooh shiny. I don't think I have that one. I've got a lot with Adric in too ;D
xx

on 2005-07-02 04:39 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] amchau.livejournal.com
>So, we're going to London for the day at some point,

Presumably, it's not quite worth coming down for just the day... I don't want to intrude on your cute-and-couple-y spontaneous thing, but if you haven't yet got somewhere to stay, and can cope with floor and/or sofa, let me remind you that my house is warm, vaguely fannish, and easy to access by Tube.

on 2005-07-02 10:42 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
Mmm, depends on your point of view. I've done it before, but perhaps us lot up north have a different view of distance. :)

I will remember your kind offer for our next trip in August, though. And I'm wondering whether you could come up here and just move in with me and possibly Colleen for a couple of days. We could discuss once Col gets back from Skaros.

on 2005-07-03 08:20 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] amchau.livejournal.com
It could be. I, after all, am a southern pansy.

Indeed, we *should* discuss it. I've got a family holiday 6-14th August-- in Northumberland-- but before that, or after it (barring results day) would be possible. Right through until whenever you start university, in fact.

on 2005-07-02 07:13 pm (UTC)
gwynnega: (Doctor/Romana 2)
Posted by [personal profile] gwynnega
Those old novelizations sound like great fun. And I adored part one of "An Unearthly Child" (though the other parts aren't nearly as good).

they mentioned that the bookshop owner has a life-size Dalek that shouts "OUT-OF-PRINT!" at people.

Heeeeeeee!

on 2005-07-02 10:43 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
I tried to download part two, but it was upside down. *boggle* Exceedingly odd. But the first part was sublime. So dark and moody and cool. *hearts*

And, eee! Your icon!

on 2005-07-03 12:28 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] snowballjane.livejournal.com
Sorry to be the bringer of ill tidings, but if the shop on Charing Cross Road was New Worlds, it closed down earlier this year when its lease ran out (the whole building it was in is being gradually emptied out. Given that Comic Showcase is also in there, it's rather traumatic).

on 2005-07-03 05:48 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
Oh, that's tragic! The shop I work in is closing within a year for that same reason, and because of the supermarket threat, and it really makes me sad.

on 2005-07-03 05:34 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] louise-chester.livejournal.com
Camden is the coolest place EVER! I absolutely love it there and could spend a lifetime just wandering round. Hope you have fun if you go! Oh and if you do you have to go to the noodle bar..its along the main strip of shops (if you like noodles that is!)

on 2005-07-04 09:53 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
Oh, you're right, it is. I've been once or twice, not nearly enough. :) I'll remember the tip.

on 2005-07-04 11:52 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] forthwritten.livejournal.com
Hi, it's the random that wrote post-football!Doctor. As a student, I'm a bit surprised that there were students near university out of term ;)
The bookshop by the station is probably Bonn's, right? You probably know about Worlds Apart.
Reid's is rather amazing. A friend of mine was looking for Mornings in the Dark, an out of print collection of Graham Greene's essays. He'd been searching for months and eventually I offered to help out. I found it the first time I went to Reid's.
There's an Oxfam bookshop on Bold Street as well. It's a bit expensive though.

There are a couple of bookshops on Charing Cross just opposite the street leading into Leicester Square. One of them is Quintos, which completely overhauls stock regularly and is the kind of place where you can find books about lycanthropy nestled against Middle English. The basement has a tiled floor and it's where they keep most of the novels. They also play interesting music.

on 2005-07-06 11:58 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
That was the one, yes. I know all the shops in the city centre and around Bold Street, but hadn't ventured further up for a while, which is why I was so surprised to stumble across Reid's.

I'll be in London next week, so I'll be sure to have a wander round Charing Cross. Thanks for the tips!

on 2005-07-06 06:50 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] forthwritten.livejournal.com
In that case, don't go to the Blackwell's in the university. They may lure you in with pretty academic books, but they're crap with ordering books in, never order enough and have been known to order the wrong books entirely.

I'm trying to think of anywhere else that might have interesting books. The Syd apparently has a huge amount of sci-fi books, but I'm not sure if they're what you're looking for.

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