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Last Days of Summer

The last days of summer. Everyone seems to have left. The rentrée is upon us, the shops full of school satchels and pens. My son has bought himself a new French agenda, diary, out of habit, though now he will be going to an English school. The difference will be interesting. I am sure.

But truly this is the best time of the year in the Pyrenees, end of August beginning of September. A golden time. Grapes ripening, Haystacks in the fields. People chopping logs. Mostly the air is still, the sun warm and you can still swim. We don’t have a pool- and I realised after many years at Corbiac how glad I was since I would have spent most of my time supervising other people’s children. What a responsibility. Not to mention the cleaning. (Oh for a pool boy!) But I love swimming. I have been very fortunate to be able to stay in my friend Martha’s house while ours was being renovated, and she has installed a swimming pond, with water-lilies, surrounded by plants and trees. It is a sublime place to swim, incredibly tranquil, a green swim. But I love to swim in the sea too, a blue swim, a swim for pure pleasure. I like to lie in the waves, to be massaged by the sea. There is also an excellent pool in Prades, nice and big for proper long exercise swims. Sadly it closes at the end of this week, la rentrée again, though there are weeks more of sun, warm enough to swim outside.

Tue, 26th August 2008

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Welcome….

Welcome to my newly updated website. We are still working on it so feel free to comment or criticise. As you can see I have a new book out, which is my main pre-occupation at the moment. (Well along with my sick mother, my son awaiting GCSE results, a travel guide I am late delivering, a house in France undergoing restoration which is STILL not finished….normal life in other words.) So I am anxiously awaiting reviews…

Writing non-fiction about real people has its pitfalls – (Fay Weldon said to me many years ago, “Just write fiction, it is much easier, you can make it all up!” but that is advice I seem to have ignored) Each book I have written has resulted in a reaction from someone which has been quite unexpected. So this time I have been very happy thus far to receive positive calls and emails from some of the people I have written about. Especially since most of them don’t really read English. In particular two of the elderly men I interviewed, one Henri Melich, a Spanish Republican refugee who fled to France after the Spanish Civil War in 1939 at age 12, and then joined the French Resistance, aged 16. He was kind enough to give me his own account of his experiences and was so pleased I had used them.

Another of my characters, Dr Henri Goujon, who was in the Resistance a the age of 17 in the Pyrenees Orientales, said he had sat up all night reading it with a dictionary at his side. He told me I had given a truthful authentic account, and above all, one that was neutral. It is true that the more I wrote about the French experience of the war the less I felt in a position to judge. We have only to ask ourselves what we would we have done in the same circumstances, had Britain been invaded. I recently read a very fine book, Resistance by Owen Sheers which imagines the Germans invading and coming to a remote Welsh valley, and the inevitable challenges and compromises that resulted. I hope you will read my book and let me know what you think.

Sun, 3rd August 2008

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