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Thank you
Thank you


Thank you to all those of you who have supported my fundraising for Greenhouse. I've just been able to send them £349. I shall keep wearing the T-shirt to continue raising awareness of their excellent work.








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It's not about the table-tennis. Or not really.
If people say they’re not sure about reading my new table-tennis themed novel doubles because they don’t like sport, I insist it’s actually about people, relationships and family secrets. Lots of unsporty people have enjoyed it, honest! Which is true, but the table-tennis is important too, because it’s a metaphor for the spins and deceptions going on beneath the surface. And also, I’d love to introduce more people to the game. I mean, what’s not to love about a sport which is simple to...
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Flaming drivers
Traffic Tom Vanderbilt Allen Lane 2008

We all know that statistically speaking we’re far more likely to be killed driving to the airport than going down with the plane, but many of us still feel far more nervous as the aircraft takes off than we ever do on the road. The difference is that the driver feels in control, and since most drivers believe they’re above average, they don’t need to worry. (Their passengers may feel differently, but that would have to be their nerves, how could...
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Traffic
Traffic Tom Vanderbilt Allen Lane 2008

[i]‘The road, more than simply a system of regulations and designs, is a place where many millions of us, with only loose parameters for how to behave, are thrown together daily in a kind of massive petri dish in which all kinds of uncharted, little-understood dynamics are at work. There is no other place where so many people from different walks of life – different ages, races, classes, religions, genders, political preferences, lifestyle...
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RIP Revd Canon John Fenton
I was sorry to learn of the death of John Fenton on 27th December 2008. I boycotted his lectures as a theology undergraduate at Durham in the 1970s, and wrote snide asides in my copy of his commentaries, because he was far too liberal for my then evangelical mindset. I think he would have understood. He used to say that theology couldn’t be taught to anyone under thirty, and I was certainly a case in point.

He was in Oxford when I moved there some fifteen years later, though our paths...
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Read my latest novel
My new novel doubles will not be available from bookshops or online bookstores until early Spring, but you can buy a copy NOW through my website - just go to the Books section.


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Can faith schools ever be truly comprehensive?
I was back in school invigilating recently. Watching a group of 25 sitting GCSE English. Mostly boys, mostly students whose names I know from their behaviour in previous exams.1  This time, nearly all of them are concentrating. One of the delights of being an invigilator is seeing students who’ve messed about in one set of exams working hard the next time. I love seeing people learn, and grow, and mature, whatever their age - which is also why I my coaching. I enjoy invigilating at...
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A Perfect Mess
A Perfect Mess: The Hidden Benefits of Disorder: How Crammed Closets, Cluttered Offices, and On-the-Fly Planning Make the World a Better Place
by Eric Abrahamson and David H Freedman  Weidenfeld & Nicolson London 2006

Look at the front of women’s magazines or the TV schedules, and we quickly come across experts who’ll tell us how to declutter and bring order to our messy lives by buying boxes and gadgets, or paying them to teach us how to be neat. But what’s wrong with a bit of...
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Of blogs and barticles
There’s millions of voices out there on the internet, what’s the point of adding another one? To launch a blog you need the inner confidence that your views and/or the details of your daily life are bound to be interesting just because they’re yours. I’ve always been much better at responding to invitations to share what I think (eg from publishers or event organisers) than at thrusting my views forward. And it’s not like I’ve been bombarded with cries of 'Annie, Annie, do us a blog!'. On the...
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'Broken society' makes a comeback ... but did it ever go away?
'Broken society'. What a useful phrase that is for politicians, preachers, and anyone who is in the business of offering their very own solution. It strikes a chord with so many of us, and the evidence is everywhere. From statistics showing more and more children born outside marriage or prisons full to bursting, through to tragic stories of innocent bystanders stabbed or an old person dying alone unnoticed, there’s plenty of proof that society is broken. So let’s cast our vote for whoever’s...
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