In Japan, we experienced days of rain. In the Netherlands, we can have similar experiences. Mostly accompanied by lots of wind. For me, it’s in the end the wind that gets on my nerves. The rain has a fresh touch, but the continuous noise of the storm is hard to bear.
Last week we had a couple of storm-free Japanese-type rainy days. Between showers, I managed to take a nice walk with the dog, an umbrella, and my camera.
I had not read Waugh before, thinking he would be rather boring. I found this book, A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh, in the estate of my father, who had better taste. So, I almost had to miss this beauty.
A young upper-class English family with one child leads a tame life. Pampered by butlers, gardeners and other household staff, the days drag by. One hits the booze early and uses lunches and dinners out of doors at clubs where you must be seen.
When his wife Brenda cheats, wanting to divorce him and pick him bald, Tony only seems to wake up. He refuses further cooperation with the divorce and leaves on a voyage of discovery to Central America.
In London, dinner is served at 2100 hours. Tony is in the middle of the Brazilian jungle. At first, he drinks chocolate milk before bed, but slowly, a catastrophe unfolds. The local guides abandon him and Dr. Messinger, his companion on the trip.
Brenda’s affair does not end well either.
Tony falls ill and hallucinates a stream of trivialities from his former sedate life. While hallucinating, he reaches the city, the trek’s goal through the jungle. But even the city turns out to be a hallucination. He is picked up by a white man left behind in the jungle. This man takes him hostage and wants Tony to keep reading to him forever from the books of Dickens that he cannot read.
In England, Tony’s cousin has inherited his big house Hetton and continues Tony’s sedate life.
Trying to get my daughter’s Kobo reader working again. She let it sit for a while and missed an apparent crucial update. The normal Kobo update process does not work anymore. So I looked around and found that Kobo reader is open source and therefore there is a community helping with questions such as mine.
A friend (not a proverbial one this time) loves riding his racing bike. He also loves riding the newest models with the newest technology, preferably expensive lightweigth ascesories. He has a busy family life as well. The argument that wins his wife over to acquire the latest fancy bike is:
‘Shall I buy a this new bike, or shall I train more hours?’