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Thursday, 8 May 2025

Men of a Certain Age - book review

Book cover showing an electric guitar held by a male hand. The title Men Of A Certain Age is in gold writing.

In Men of a Certain Age, music journalist Kate Mossman has compiled a selection of interviews with ageing male rock stars, and uses them to analyse her own obsession with ageing male rock stars.

Does the world need another book about middle-aged male rock stars? Kate Mossman asks the question herself: the answer being that she needed to write it. “The older male rock star,” she writes, “isn’t just my specialist subject – it’s my obsession.”

Monday, 10 March 2025

Covid diary March 2020: Handwashing, toilet paper and Schrodinger's lockdown

A police car speeds past a billboard displaying the words “Stay Alert. Government Incompetence. Costs lives.”

As I said in my previous post, I kept a “coronavirus diary” during the early months of the pandemic. I’ve always kept a diary but I wrote this alongside my normal everyday one. Partly for posterity and partly because it felt important.

I also said that we need to remember. And what I have just read in my five-year-old diary has shocked me.

You can see how gradually life became less and less normal. And then suddenly, very not-normal at all.

Sunday, 9 March 2025

Covid five years on: there is no "other side"

A cheerful looking old woman modelling a white T-shirt with blackmail letter words reading "Please keep your fucking distance".

A social distancing T shirt sold during covid in aid of Age UK, modelled by a 94-year-old woman.


Suddenly everyone is reminding me that covid was five years ago.

Well, covid started (officially) five years ago. It never finished. All that talk about “see you on the other side” turned out to be optimistic. There is no other side. There’s just now, when I’m usually the only person on the bus wearing a face mask. And when I have friends who still have to self isolate and have invited me to a Facebook group called “Still hardcore coviding”. 

So, no, there is no "after covid". But there is a "before covid", and it feels like another world. What happened five years ago divides my life, and my memories. Once, we’d measure out our lives in holidays or jobs. Now, I just finding myself saying "that was before covid".

As for “during covid”, I’m revisiting it now.