December 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there. (TV shows without full posts will not be linked, but will be listed.)

Books

Fiction

“Consider Phlebas” Iain M. Banks. Science fiction, set in his Culture universe. Part of Read All the Fiction, kept.

Total: 1

Non-Fiction

“Plantagenet England 1225-1360” Michael Prestwich. Part of the New Oxford History of England.

Total: 1

Museums

Beyond El Dorado. Exhibition of pre-Hispanic Colombian gold artifacts at the British Museum.

Total: 1

Photos

And Did Those Feet ….

Royal Power.

Total: 2

Radio

The Making of the Modern Arab World. Four part Radio 4 series about the modern history of the Middle East.

Total: 1

Talks

“The Lion in Ancient Egypt: An Elite Phenomenon?” Lyn Stagg. Talk at the December EEG meeting, about lion symbolism & iconography in pre-dynastic and early dynastic Egypt.

Total: 1

Television

Non-Fiction

4,000-Year-Old Cold Case: The Body in the Bog. One off programme about the discovery and investigation of a body in an Irish bog. Was a bit Discovery Channel (they Solved The Mystery and Proved The Theory), and a bit unclear how general their idea was but nonetheless interesting.

The Bridges that Built London with Dan Cruickshank – one off programme telling the history of London’s bridges across the Thames. Interesting, but got a bit woo-woo at times towards the end.

Byzantium: A Tale of Three Cities – history of Byzantium aka Constantinople aka Istanbul presented by Simon Sebag Montefiore.

Charlie Brooker: How Videogames Changed the World. A retrospective of the last 25 years of computer games, and their impact on our culture.

David Starkey’s Music and Monarchy – David Starkey tells us all about the influence the English monarchy has had on English music starting from Henry V through to the present day.

Indie Game: The Movie – film length documentary about indie games, following the development of Super Meat Boy and Fez, and talking to the creator of Braid.

The Joy of Logic – one off programme about the history of logic and maths, and the birth of computer science.

The Science of Doctor Who – a lecture by Brian Cox about the physics of space time, and the Fermi paradox.

Shipwrecks: Britain’s Sunken History – Sam Willis talking about shipwrecks around Britain or involving British ships, their impact on history and our culture.

Stories of the Dark Earth: Meet the Ancestors Revisited – Julian Richards returns to digs that were originally filmed for Meet the Ancestors more than a decade ago & sees what new things have been learnt.

A Tudor Feast – one-off programme about preparing a Tudor feast using authentic recipes and techniques.

Tudor Monastery Farm – part re-enactment, part documentary about what life would be like living on and running a farm in 1500.

Unreported World: Egypt’s Tomb Raiders. Documentary about the impact the recent political instability in Egypt has had on the people who rely on the tourism industry, and on the antiquities.

Total: 13

November 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“Crewel” Gennifer Albin. A rather disappointing YA dystopia. Library book.

“Enchanted Glass” Diana Wynne Jones. Childrens’ fantasy book about magicians & fairies. Library book.

“Poltergeist” Kat Richardson. Sequel to Greywalker, urban fantasy about a ghost-seeing PI in Seattle. Library book.

Total: 3

Concerts

Marillion playing at the Waterside Theatre, Aylesbury, 9/11/2013.

Steven Wilson at the Royal Albert Hall, 20/10/2013.

Total: 2

Photos

Camera Shy.

Expedition.

Gathering.

Past Glory.

Tattered.

Total: 5

Radio

The Book of Common Prayer. In Our Time episode about the history & contents of the Book of Common Prayer.

The Corn Laws. In Our Time episode about the Corn Laws of the early 19th Century.

Galen. In Our Time episode about Galen, the 2nd Century AD Greek physician.

Total: 2

Talks

“The Arts of War: Assyrian Narrative Art” Nigel Tallis. Talk at the British Museum Members’ Open Evening in November 2013.

“Ritual and Religion in Egyptian Mines and Quarries” Hannah Pethen. Talk given at the EEG meeting in November, about the rituals and mythology that the Ancient Egyptians had surrounding mining.

Total: 2

Television

Fiction

Doctor Who: The Day of the Doctor.

Total: 1

Non-Fiction

Charles Darwin and the Tree of Life. David Attenborough talks about Darwin, Darwin’s theory of evolution and Attenborough’s own past.

Cave of Forgotten Dreams. Film about the Chuavet cave paintings.

Dan Snow’s A History of Congo. Depressing look at the last 150 or so years of the history of Congo & how this has left the country in a state.

David Starkey’s Music and Monarchy. David Starkey tells us all about the influence the English monarchy has had on English music starting from Henry V through to the present day.

Doctor Who: The Ultimate Guide. Programme about the 50 year backstory & history of Doctor Who.

Games Britannia. History of games in Britain, we only watched the first episode.

A Hundred Years of Us. Aired to coincide with the 2011 census this is a look at how British culture has changed over the last hundred years.

The King’s War on Witches: Revealed. Rather good Channel 5 documentary about James VI & I’s witchhunts.

Metal: How it Works. Series about the history & use of various materials (only the first episode is about metals).

Nelson’s Caribbean Hell-hole: An Eighteenth Century Navy Graveyard Uncovered. Sam Willis follows an archaeological excavation in Antigua, uncovering 18th Century Navy burials.

The Ottomans: Europe’s Muslim Emperors. Series about the history of the Ottoman Empire presented by Rageh Omaar.

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Simon Armitage talks about the poem Sir Gawain & the Green Knight, and his translation of it.

Stories of the Dark Earth: Meet the Ancestors Revisted. Julian Richards returns to digs that were originally filmed for Meet the Ancestors more than a decade ago & sees what new things have been learnt.

Tutankhamun: The Mystery of the Burnt Mummy. Cut down version of Ultimate Tut.

The Viking Sagas. Rather weak programme on the Viking sagas presented by Janina Ramirez.

When Coal Was King. Timeshift episode about the culture of coal miners in the 1940s & 50s. Not a full post.

Total: 16

October 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“Use of Weapons” Iain M. Banks. Science fiction, set in his Culture universe – Zakalwe is the one operative capable of doing the job that Special Circumstances need doing, so he’s brought out of retirement but his past is catching up with him. Part of Read All the Fiction, kept.

“Look to Windward” Iain M. Banks. Science fiction, set in his Culture universe. Part of Read All the Fiction, kept.

“All Our Yesterdays” Cristin Terrill. Young adult time travel novel, rather good. Library book.

Total: 3

Non-Fiction

“Plantagenet England 1225-1360” Michael Prestwich. Part of the New Oxford History of England.

Total: 1

Photos

Delicate.

Turin Street At Night.

Weather Beaten.

Total: 3

Radio

Exoplanets. In Our Time episode about planets in other solar systems to our own.

The Mamluks. In Our Time episode about the Mamluks, who were a slave army who ruled Egypt between the 13th & 16th Centuries AD.

Total: 2

Talks

EEG Trip to the EES. A group of us from the EEG visited the London office of the EES to see their archives.

“Freemasonry and Ancient Egypt” Cathie Bryan. Talk at the EEG meeting in October, about the influences of (perceived) Egyptian culture on Freemasonry.

Total: 2

Television

Non-Fiction

Ancient Greece: The Greatest Show on Earth. Michael Scott looks at the development of drama in Ancient Greece.

David Attenborough’s Rise of the Animals: Triumph of the Vertebrates. David Attenborough shows us how the vertebrates evolved from little worms to the diversity of today.

A Hundred Years of Us. Aired to coincide with the 2011 census this is a look at how British culture has changed over the last hundred years.

John Sergeant on Tracks of Empire. John Sergeant travels across India on the railway, looking at the history of India, the British Empire and the railways.

Nigel Slater: Life is Sweets. A combination of a history & survey of British sweets with some autobiographical reminiscences from Nigel Slater.

The Ottomans: Europe’s Muslim Emperors. Series about the history of the Ottoman Empire presented by Rageh Omaar.

Shakespeare in Italy. Francesco da Mosto talking about Shakespeare’s plays that’re set in Italy.

The Story of the Jews. Series presented by Simon Schama about the history of the Jews.

Stories of the Dark Earth: Meet the Ancestors Revisted. Julian Richards returns to digs that were originally filmed for Meet the Ancestors more than a decade ago & sees what new things have been learnt.

The Wonder of Dogs. Kate Humble, Steve Leonard & Ruth Goodman talk about the history & biology of dogs.

Total: 10

Trip

King’s College, Cambridge – we visited for the first time in September 2013.

Total: 1

September 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“The Woken Gods” Gwenda Bond. YA urban fantasy set in a modern world where the gods have woken up, too much boyfriend not enough mythology. Library book.

“Black Feathers” Joseph D’Lacey. Horror/fantasy/alt-history story following a teenager’s quest to find the Crowman in a dystopic Britain. Library book.

“Limits of Power” Elizabeth Moon. Fantasy, fourth book in the Paladin’s Legacy series set in the same world as the Deed of Paksenarrion triology. New.

“Greywalker” Kat Richardson. Urban fantasy about a private investigator who sees ghosts after recovering from being dead. Library book.

“Delusion in Death” J. D. Robb. Futuristic crime/detective/thriller. Part of the Eve Dallas series. Library book.

Total: 5

Non-Fiction

“Plantagenet England 1225-1360” Michael Prestwich. Part of the New Oxford History of England.

Total: 1

Concerts

Fish at the Junction, Cambridge 16/9/2013.

Roger Waters playing The Wall live at Wembley, 14/9/13.

Total: 2

Museums

Life & Death in Pompeii & Herculaneum – British Museum exhibition about the Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum.

Total: 1

Photos

Colchester Zoo – a set from the zoo.

Ivory Bracelets.

Tiger.

Toothy Grin.

Wine Cups.

Total: 5

Radio

Pascal. In Our Time episode about the life & work of Blaise Pascal.

Turkey: The New Ottomans. A three part series putting modern Turkey in a historical context, and looking at its relationships with the Arab World & the West.

Total: 2

Talks

“Meteorites in Ancient Egypt” Diane Johnson. Talk given by Diane Johnson at the EEG meeting in September about her work on meteoric iron in Ancient Egyptian objects.

Total: 1

Television

Non-Fiction

A303: Highway to the Sun. Tom Fort drives along the A303 & talks about the history of the area.

The Burrowers: Animals Underground. Nature series about the lives of British burrowing animals – rabbits, badgers & water voles – filming them in artificial burrows.

Egypt’s Lost Rival. Documentary about the city of Qatna which is in modern day Syra and was contemporaneous with the Second Intermediate Period of Egypt, the programme was both about the history & about the excavation of it.

The Egyptian Job. Documentary about the robbing of Amenemhat III’s tomb, I wasn’t keen on the framing narrative for the programme (overly fictionalised for my tastes).

Indian Ocean with Simon Reeve. Simon Reeve travels around the coast of the Indian Ocean.

King Alfred & the Anglo-Saxons. Series presented by Michael Wood about King Alfred & his successors.

Mothers, Murderers and Mistresses: Empresses of Ancient Rome. Three part series about the lives of powerful women of the Roman Empire, presented by Catharine Edwards.

Quest for Egypt’s Lost King. Documentary about Akhenaten & Amarna. Sadly took a nose-dive off the plausibility cliff towards the end.

The Story of the Jews. Series presented by Simon Schama about the history of the Jews.

Tiger: Spy in the Jungle. Nature series about tigers growing up, filmed by cameras carried by elephants.

Ultimate Tut. Documentary about Tutankhamun, including another theory as to how he died. Presented by Chris Naunton.

The Wonder of Dogs. Kate Humble, Steve Leonard & Ruth Goodman talk about the history & biology of dogs.

Total: 12

August 2013 In Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“The Wasp Factory” Iain Banks. Horror, and very hard to summarise in one line. Part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“King’s Dragon” Kate Elliott. First book of Elliott’s Crown of Stars series, epic fantasy with flavours of English history to its secondary world. Library book.

“Think of the Children” Kerry Wilkinson. Crime novel, set in Manchester, about a sequence of murdered or missing children. Library book.

Total: 3

Non-Fiction

“The Arab Uprisings: The People Want the Fall of the Regime”. A book about the Arab Spring, written by a BBC journalist.

Total: 1

Museums

Treasures of the Royal Courts: Tudors, Stuarts & the Russian Tsars. An exhibition at the V&A about the English & Russian courts centred round the silverware gifted by England to Russia.

V&A Museum – a brief visit to some other galleries while I was there for the Treasures of the Royal Courts exhibition.

Total: 2

Photos

Ancient Ripples.

Offering.

Porcelain Bottles.

Total: 3

Radio

Queen Zenobia. In Our Time episode about the Palmyran Queen who rebelled against Rome & founded a short-lived empire in the Middle East around 270AD.

Turkey: The New Ottomans. A three part series putting modern Turkey in a historical context, and looking at its relationships with the Arab World & the West.

Total: 2

Talks

August EEG Meeting. The format this month was different – 4 short talks from members (including me).

Total: 1

Television

Non-Fiction

Ancient Apocalype. Series about how various ancient civilisations met their doom.

Britain’s Stone Age Tsunami. Time Team special about a tsunami that hit Britain about 8000 years ago.

Caligula with Mary Beard. Mary Beard tells us what we know about Caligula, and looks at how much of the myth might be true.

Doctor Who Live: The Next Doctor. Announcement of Peter Capaldi being cast to play the next Doctor.

Indian Ocean with Simon Reeve. Simon Reeve travels around the coast of the Indian Ocean.

London: A Tale of Two Cities with Dan Cruickshank. Programme about the development of London in the 17th Century, presented by Dan Cruickshank.

The Making of King Arthur. Simon Armitage looking at the development of the King Arthur myth in Norman times.

The Mystery of Rome’s X Tomb. Programme about a mass grave dating back to the 1st-3rd Centuries AD found in the catacombs of Rome in 2003.

Royal Institution Christmas Lectures: Meet Your Brain. A series of three children’s lectures from Christmas 2011 about the brain.

The Secret History of Genghis Khan. Programme about what a history written by Genghis Khan’s adopted son tells us about him.

Secrets of the Saxon Gold. Time Team Special about the Staffordshire hoard.

She Wolves: England’s Early Queens. Series about Queens of England in medieval & Tudor times, presented by Helen Castor.

Who Were the Greeks?. Two-part series with Michael Scot giving an overview of Greek civilisation & looking at the truth vs. the myth of what they were like.

Total: 14

July 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“Nightfall One” Isaac Asimov. Anthology of five stories by Isaac Asimov, including his classic “Nightfall”. Part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

Total: 1

Non-Fiction

“Plantagenet England 1225-1360” Michael Prestwich. Part of the New Oxford History of England.

Total: 1

Museums

Im Licht von Amarna. Exhibition about Amarna era Egypt at the Neues Museum, Berlin timed to coincide with 100 years since the discovery of the bust of Nefertiti.

Neues Museum, Berlin.

Total: 2

Photos

Cool & Minty-Green.

Lurker.

Parent & Child.

Staring Into Eternity.

Total: 4

Radio

The Amazons. In Our Time episode about the Amazons of Greek myth.

Icelandic Sagas. In Our Time episode about Icelandic Sagas.

Relativity. In Our Time episode about Einstein’s theories of relativity.

Total: 3

Reflections

Filed Under A – stats & a retrospective on the books I’ve read so far as part of Read All the Fiction.

Other Things I Read While Reading the As – stats & a retrospective on the fiction I read during the same time period as the books filed under A on my bookshelf.

Total: 2

Talks

“Marriage in Ancient Egypt” Lucia Gahlin. Talk at the EEG meeting in July, about marriage in Ancient Egypt.

Total: 1

Television

Non-Fiction

Henry VII: The Winter King. Programme presented by Thomas Penn about the reign of Henry VII.

Horizon: Little Cat Diaries. Short follow-up programme to The Secret Life of the Cat.

Horizon: What Makes Us Human?. Programme about the differences between humans & chimps, presented by Alice Roberts.

The Iraq War. Series looking at the events leading up to the Iraq War and the aftermath of the war, with interviews with many key figures.

Michael Wood on Beowulf. Programme about the epic poem Beowulf, presented by Michael Wood.

The Most Dangerous Man in Tudor England. Biography of William Tynedale (who translated the Bible into English & was executed for doing it) presented by Melyvn Bragg.

A Night at the Rijksmuseum. Programme presented by Andrew Graham-Dixon about the re-opening of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.

Royal Institution Christmas Lectures: Meet Your Brain. A series of three children’s lectures from Christmas 2011 about the brain.

Secrets of Stonehenge: A Time Team Special. Time Team filmed a (non-Time Team) excavation at Stonehenge & talk about new theories about why & how it was built.

Secrets of the Arabian Nights. Richard E. Grant talks about the history & stories of the Arabian Nights tales.

She Wolves: England’s Early Queens. Series about Queens of England in medieval & Tudor times, presented by Helen Castor.

Time Team: The Hollow Way. The Time Team crew excavate a deserted medieval village at Ulnaby, County Durham.

TOWN with Nicholas Crane. Nicholas Crane visiting British towns.

Treasures of Ancient Rome. Series about the art & history of Ancient Rome, presented by Alastair Sooke.

Treasures of the Louvre. One-off documentary about the history of the Louvre and of France, and a tour of the highlights of the museum’s collection, presented by Andrew Hussey.

Wild Shepherdess with Kate Humble. Series where Kate Humble visits sheep farmers around the world to see what’s the same & what’s different.

Total: 16

June 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“The Alternate Asimovs” Isaac Asimov. Original previously unpublished versions of the novels Pebble in the Sky and End of Eternity, and of the short story Belief. Part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“Pebble in the Sky” Isaac Asimov. Asimov’s first novel, originally published in 1950. Far-future science fiction. Part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“Foundation” Isaac Asimov. Far future science fiction, the start of Asimov’s most famous series. Library book.

“Foundation and Empire” Isaac Asimov. Far future science fiction, part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“Second Foundation” Isaac Asimov. Far future science fiction, part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“Life After Life” Kate Atkinson. Part historical fiction, part alternate history, part historical fantasy – the story of a woman growing up in the early 20th Century over & over again. Library book.

“Shift” Hugh Howey. The sequel to Wool, post- and immediately pre-apocalypse. Library book.

“Flash” L. E. Modesitt Jr. Science fiction political thriller set a few hundred years in the future. Library book.

“Blackbirds” Chuck Wendig. Urban fantasy/thriller about a young woman who can tell when & how people die just by touching them. Library book.

Total: 9

Non-Fiction

“China: The Three Emperors 1662-1795” eds. Evelyn S. Rawski & Jessica Rawson. Exhibition catalogue from a 2005 exhibition at the Royal Academy, covering the art collection of the three Qing Dynasty Emperors the Kangxi Emperor, the Yongzheng Emperor and the Qianlong Emperor.

Total: 1

Concerts

The Stone Roses, Finsbury Park 7/6/2013.

Total: 1

Photos

Climbing.

Just Hanging About.

Spine.

Turned to Stone.

Waiting for the Sun.

Total: 5

Radio

Japan’s Sakoku Period. In Our Time episode about the period of Japan’s history where it pursued a policy of isolation from the rest of the world.

The Putney Debates. In Our Time episode about the context of & discussions in the Putney Debates (held in 1647 after the end of the first part of the Civil Wars).

Total: 2

Talks

“Monuments to Amun-Ra ‘King of the Gods’: The Temples of Thebes” George Hart. Talk given by George Hart at the June meeting of the EEG, about Amun-Ra and the various temples in the Theban region.

Total: 1

Television

Non-Fiction

Donald Campbell: Speed King. Biography of Donald Campbell, who died in 1967 trying to break the water speed record (for the 8th time).

Fit to Rule. Series about the British monarchs through the lens of their medical history from Henry VIII to Edward VII, presented by Lucy Worsley.

The Genius of Marie Curie: The Woman Who Lit Up the World. Programme about the life & work of Marie Curie.

The Genius of Turner: Painting the Industrial Revolution. A programme about the life & work of J. M. W. Turner.

Australia with Simon Reeve. Simon Reeve travelling around Australia.

Henry VIII’s Enforcer: The Rise and Fall of Thomas Cromwell. Documentary about the life of Thomas Cromwell, presented by Diarmaid MacCulloch. Part of the BBC’s Tudor Court Season.

Horizon: The Secret Life of the Cat. Programme about investigating the territories & ranges of pet cats using GPS.

Ice Age Giants. Alice Roberts talking about the large animals that lived during the ice age, complete with CGI recreations.

Isaac Newton: The Last Magician. Biography of Isaac Newton.

The Road to El Alamein: Churchill’s Desert Campaign. Programme presented by Jonathan Dimbleby about the events leading up to the pivotal World War II battle at El Alamein in late 1942.

TOWN with Nicholas Crane. Nicholas Crane visiting British towns.

The Tube: An Underground History. Programme made to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the London Underground.

Why the Industrial Revolution Happened Here. Cut down version of a programme about what made Britain such fertile ground for the Industrial Revolution.

Wild Shepherdess with Kate Humble. Series where Kate Humble visits sheep farmers around the world to see what’s the same & what’s different.

Total: 14

May 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“Isaac Asimov Presents Great SF Stories #10 (1948)” ed. Isaac Asimov & Martin H. Greenberg. Anthology of the best short stories of 1948. Part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“Shadow of Night” Deborah Harkness. Sequel to an urban fantasy where the protagonists have travelled back to 1590, so this instalment is more historical fantasy. Library book.

“Nemesis” Isaac Asimov. Science fiction set in a mid-distance future where some of humanity is living permanently on space stations and interstellar travel is just beginning. Part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“A Memory of Light” Robert Jordan & Brandon Sanderson. Last book of the Wheel of Time series. Library book.

Total: 4

Non-Fiction

“China: The Three Emperors 1662-1795” eds. Evelyn S. Rawski & Jessica Rawson. Exhibition catalogue from a 2005 exhibition at the Royal Academy, covering the art collection of the three Qing Dynasty Emperors the Kangxi Emperor, the Yongzheng Emperor and the Qianlong Emperor.

Total: 1

Films

Star Trek Into Darkness.

Total: 1

Photos

Architectural Details – a series of photos taken in Cambridge.

Baboon.

Motion.

Pharaoh.

Total: 3

Radio

Absolute Zero. In Our Time episode about absolute zero, both what it is and the history of the scientists trying to achieve it in the laboratory.

Gnosticism. In Our Time episode about Gnosticism.

Pitt-Rivers. In Our Time episode about Augustus Henry Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers, the man whose collection forms the basis of the Pitt-Rivers Museum in Oxford.

Water. In Our Time episode about the chemical nature of water.

Total: 4

Talks

EEG Visit to the Petrie Museum. A trip to the Petrie Museum by members of the EEG where we were given a tour & a talk by Wolfram Grajetzki about Lahun.

“Mummies, Asps and Far Too Much Eye Make-up: Ancient Egypt in the Cinema” John J. Johnston. Talk given at the EEG meeting in May, about films featuring Ancient Egypt.

Total: 2

Television

Fiction

Doctor Who: The Crimson Horror.

Doctor Who: Nightmare in Silver.

Doctor Who: The Name of the Doctor.

Total: 3

Non-Fiction

Archaeology: A Secret History. Richard Miles presenting a series about the history of archaeology.

Brazil with Michael Palin. Palin travels round Brazil.

Chivalry & Betrayal: The Hundred Years War. Programme about the Hundred Years War between England & France, presented by Janina Ramirez.

Guts: The Strange and Mysterious World of the Human Stomach. Programme about the human digestive system presented by Michael Mosley, involving internal cameras amongst other things.

The Last Days of Anne Boleyn. Part of the BBC’s Tudor Court Season, a programme where seven experts discuss what is known and what is conjectured about the fall of Anne Boleyn.

Ice Age Giants. Alice Roberts talking about the large animals that lived during the ice age, complete with CGI recreations.

Panorama: North Korea Undercover. Programme about North Korea, partly filmed inside North Korea itself.

Wild Arabia. Nature show about the wildlife & people living in Arabia.

Wonders of Life. Brian Cox series about life – mostly about the physics & chemistry behind it.

Total: 9

April 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Books

Fiction

“Before the Golden Age 3” ed. Isaac Asimov. Part of Read All the Fiction, short stories from 1935-1938 plus autobiography of Asimov during those years. Boxed up.

“Isaac Asimov Presents Great SF Stories #9 (1947)” ed. Isaac Asimov & Martin H. Greenberg. Anthology of the best short stories of 1947. Part of Read All the Fiction, boxed up.

“Control Point” Myke Cole. Military fantasy set mostly in a present day US. Library book.

“The Iron King” Maurice Druon. Fictionalised history of the Capet Dynasty in France in the early 14th Century. Library book.

“Wool” Hugh Howey. Post-apocalypse dystopia with the flavour of a generation ship (without being in a ship). Library book.

“In Great Waters” Kit Whitfield. Fantastical alternate history in Tudor-ish times where the royal families of Europe are hybrids with merpeople. Library book.

Total: 6

Non-Fiction

“China: The World’s Oldest Civilisation Revealed” John Makeham. Part of Chapter-by-Chapter, an overview of the sweep of Chinese history from the Paleolithic through to the death of the last Emperor in the 20th Century.

Total: 1

Concerts

Marillion Weekend 2013.

Total: 1

Photos

Brute Force & Ignorance.

Lampstand.

Peel Here.

Turtle.

Total: 4

Radio

Epicureanism. In Our Time episode about the philosophy of Epicurus.

Ice Ages. In Our Time episode about ice ages.

Romulus and Remus. In Our Time episode about Rome’s founding myth.

The War of 1812. In Our Time episode about the war between Britain & the US which started in 1812.

Total: 4

Talks

“Farming & Agriculture in the Nile Valley” Victor Blunden. Talk at the EEG meeting in April, about the farming methods of the ancient Egyptians.

Total: 1

Television

Fiction

Doctor Who: The Rings of Akhaten.

Doctor Who: Cold War.

Doctor Who: Hide.

Doctor Who: Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS.

Total: 4

Non-Fiction

Ancient Egypt – Life and Death in the Valley of the Kings. Programme about the more ordinary Egyptians – those who lived in the workmen’s village at Deir el-Medina.

Chivalry & Betrayal: The Hundred Years War. Programme about the Hundred Years War between England & France, presented by Janina Ramirez.

Egypt’s Mystery Chamber. Mini-review of programme about KV63.

A History of Syria with Dan Snow. Documentary about the historical context for the current civil war in Syria.

Howard Goodall’s Story of Music. History of Western music presented by Howard Goodall.

Israel: Facing the Future. John Ware visits Israel to talk to the people about the future of the country.

Museum Secrets: Cairo Museum. Mini-review of programme about selected objects from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

Nefertiti. Mini-review of old programme about Nefertiti.

The Other Pompeii: Life & Death in Herculaneum. One-off programme about what we can learn about Roman life from Herculaneum.

Pompeii: The Mystery of the People Frozen in Time. Margaret Mountford presents a programme about the eruption of Vesuvius and how the people of Pompeii & Herculaneum died.

Ramesses III: The Pharaoh Behind the Myth. Mini-review of programme about the harem conspiracy against Ramesses III.

Sun Pharaoh. Mini-review of dreadful documentary about Akhenaten.

Tutankhamun Conspiracies with Bettany Hughes. Mini-review of unfocussed documentary mostly about Tutankhamun.

Wild Arabia. Nature show about the wildlife & people living in Arabia.

Total: 14

Trip

Berlin – we spent a long weekend in Berlin in March.

Total: 1

March 2013 in Review

This is an index and summary of the things I’ve talked about over the last month. Links for multi-post subjects go to the first post (even if it’s before this month), you can follow the internal navigation links from there.

Concerts

Steven Wilson at the Festival Hall, 4/3/2013.

Total: 1

Museums

Ice Age Art: Arrival of the Modern Mind. Exhibition of European Ice Age artifacts at the British Museum.

Total: 1

Photos

Christmas Gargoyle.

Goose.

Replica Lion Man Statue – a replica of one of the objects in the Ice Age Art exhibition.

Total: 3

Radio

Comets. In Our Time episode about comets.

Le Morte d’Arthur. In Our Time episode about Malory’s version of the Arthurian legend.

Total: 2

Talks

“Egypt’s So-Called First Intermediate Period and the Tomb of Ankhtifi” Glenn Godenho. Talk given at the EEG meeting in March, about the tomb of Ankhtifi & what it tells us about the First Intermediate Period.

Total: 1

Television

Fiction

Doctor Who: The Bells of Saint John.

Total: 1

Non-Fiction

Ancient Egypt – Life and Death in the Valley of the Kings. Programme about the more ordinary Egyptians – those who lived in the workmen’s village at Deir el-Medina.

The Dark Ages: An Age of Light. Programme about the art of the Early Medieval period, presented by Waldemar Januszczak.

Howard Goodall’s Story of Music. History of Western music presented by Howard Goodall.

Total: 3