Our New Year wants to start here…

Image by 👀 Mabel Amber, who will one day from Pixabay

A quick glance out of my window this morning confirmed what I was already feeling.

The sun was shining, the sky was a lovely shade of blue, and the bird station in the garden was alive with small birds, all trying for the best spot. I spotted a magpie holding court in the enormous gum tree in my neighbour’s garden. Today these branches were stationary, gone at last were those terrible winds…

In other words, today was a good day. The fridge freezer was trying to behave, and I had made an appointment with the Hotpoint engineers to sort it out. I have booked the afternoon for a writing session, as it is high time I got to grips with that.

As for the Macbook, that is back in its box awaiting delivery. I tried very hard to learn the Apple ropes, but I had to give in. My old brain likes things a little less complicated these days.

I have the rest of the morning to play catch up, and I will begin by posting our review for The Rat and the Python: Fashion by Alex Craigie. (or Trish, for those of you who love her books!)

If you haven’t heard of a liberty bodice, believe that half-a-crown is something to do with impoverished royalty and never had the experience of slapping a television to stop the grainy black and white picture from rolling, then this series might not be for you. Please give it a go, though – I suspect that most of it will still resonate no matter where you were brought up!

Book 3 looks at fashion and how it’s changed since the end of WWII. From utility coats and twinsets, to schoolboys in short trousers with socks and garters. From the swinging sixties with its long, long hair and short, short skirts, to psychedelia and beyond.

The Rat in the Python is about Baby Boomers who, in the stability following the Second World War, formed a statistical bulge in the population python. It is a personal snapshot of a time that is as mystifying to my children as the Jurassic Era – and just as unrecognisable.

My intention is to nudge some long-forgotten memories to the surface, test your own recollections and provide information and statistics to put it all in context.

Are you sitting comfortably?

Then I’ll begin…

About the author

Alex Craigie

Alex Craigie

Alex Craigie is the pen name of Trish Power.

Trish was ten when her first play was performed at school. It was in rhyming couplets and written in pencil in a book with imperial weights and measures printed on the back. There were two princes in it – one was called Rupert and the other was changed to Sam because she couldn’t find enough rhymes for Randolph.

When her children were young, she wrote short stories for magazines before returning to the teaching job that she loved.

Trish has had six books published under the pen name of Alex Craigie. Three books cross genre boundaries and feature elements of romance, thriller and suspense against a backdrop of social issues. Someone Close to Home highlights the problems affecting care homes, Acts of Convenience has issues concerning the health service at its heart, and The Bubble Reputation reflects her fears about social media and the damage it can do. Another book. Means to Deceive, is a psychological thriller set in Pembrokeshire in Wales.

Someone Close to Home has won a Chill with a Book award and a Chill with the Book of the Month award. In 2019 it was one of the top ten bestsellers in its category on Amazon.

The Bubble Reputation won a Chill With a Book Premier Readers’ Award in 2023.

She is currently writing a series of books called The Rat in the Python about growing up as a Baby Boomer. The title comes from the term for the bulge in the population statistics caused by post-war babies.

Our Review

I love these books so much because they don’t just remind you of the past; you get to live it all over again in brilliant technicolour! Almost every page has photographs of long-forgotten clothing and lifestyle fashions from the sixties, seventies and eighties, and not all of them deserve to be forgotten.

Even if you haven’t given a thought to what you wore as a child, this book brings all those memories back, including the discomfort! Every page brings memories, as fresh as the day you made them, reminding us just how much our lives have changed.

The Swinging Sixties will always be my favourite, as this was when I started developing my own style. I was very much a hippie then, preferring comfortable baggy jumpers and T-shirts. In many ways, I still am!

I did try the quiz at the end, designed to test your knowledge. It was fun but my memory let me down several times. All in all, I recommend all of these books for their humour and knowledge, and eagerly await the next one…


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Responses

  1. alexcraigie Avatar

    Dear Debby, where would I be without your kindness and guidance! Thank you so much for leading me here. xx hugs xx

    Liked by 1 person

  2. alexcraigie Avatar

    Jaye and Anita, I am so very grateful to you for this wonderful and unexpected review! I just noticed Debby’s link to this and it chills the blood to think I might have missed it. Here’s to a new year that shrugs off all the gremlins of the old and gives you contentment and love. xx

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

      I think those gremlins are always with us, Trish, but hopefully they will be kinder this year…

      Liked by 1 person

      1. alexcraigie Avatar

        Amen to that x

        Like

  3. dgkaye Avatar

    Great post ladies. I too enjoyed Alex’s book and will share around so she can see this. :) x

    Liked by 2 people

  4. acflory Avatar

    Great post, Jaye, but my eye caught on one word, well two actually: gum tree. For some reason I’ve always assumed that you and Anita lived in the UK???

    I recently did a deep dive into my Amazon books and discovered that I have read one of Alex Craigie’s Python books already! It was some years ago so I’m looking forward to reading this latest one.

    Hope your New Year has started well. :)

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

      We do live in the UK, Meeks, its the gum tree that is out of place. We are very fond of this tree, as it overshadows everything…
      and no, our New Year hasn’t started at all really. We are still waiting for old year problems to bugger off!

      Liked by 2 people

      1. acflory Avatar

        Oh! And Oh. I had no idea a gum would survive in the UK. That’s amazing. Sorry about the old year problems though. I hope they get sorted before this new year gets any older.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

          It’s surviving all right. One of the biggest trees I have ever seen! Much taller than our house and several houses wide. There was a rumour about cutting it down, but they probably don’t know where to start, not to mention the cost!

          Liked by 1 person

          1. acflory Avatar

            I love gums, but in a fire prone area they are blow torches – literally evolved to burn thanks to the volatile eucalyptus oil they contain. In the UK you shouldn’t have any issues. Even if you lit a bonfire at its base, the heat wouldn’t be enough to cause a problem. It takes a ‘crown fire’ to do that, and you’d need about a million gum trees to get a crown fire. :)

            Liked by 1 person

            1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

              good to know we are safe, Meeks…

              Liked by 1 person

              1. acflory Avatar
    2. alexcraigie Avatar

      Hi Meeks – I remember chatting with you on Diana’s blog but I couldn’t remember your name! Many thanks for the comment and I hope you enjoy the book if you get a chance to read it. If your TBR pile is anything like mine, it could be a while… :D

      Liked by 2 people

      1. acflory Avatar

        Hi Alex! I’m actually waiting on a new charger for my Kindle Fire so I’m having to re-read paper books until it arrives, but after that I’ll be powering through my TBR with a vengeance. :D

        Liked by 2 people

        1. alexcraigie Avatar

          My Kindle is now a treasured possession. It holds so much delight and can accompany me everywhere. I still love paper books. They added another layer of pleasure to the senses, but I’ve reached the point where the only places left with places to stack them are the bath, shower and oven… :D

          Liked by 2 people

          1. acflory Avatar

            LMAO!!!! I definitely wouldn’t use the oven, we use ours far too often. ;)
            My eyes aren’t what they used to be so, as much as I love my paper books, I almost need a magnifying glass to read them these days. Can’t wait to get my Kindle up and running again. I should probably go and dust the bookshelves while I wait. lol

            Liked by 1 person

  5. Gwen M. Plano Avatar

    Wonderful spotlight on Trish and her books! I’ve added The Rat in the Python to my Kindle and hope to read it soon. BTW, I share your assessment of technology – the simpler the better for me. 😊

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

      I used to enjoy a challenge, Gwen, and actually learned a lot with this attitude, but I am having to admit those days are over…

      Like

    2. alexcraigie Avatar

      Thank you so much for the comment and for buying The Rat in the Python. I’m sure you can imagine how happy I am at the moment! :)

      Liked by 1 person

  6. V.M.Sang Avatar

    I well remember liberty bodices, and have a half crown lying around somewhere.

    I also remember the very full skirts in the 1950s that preceded the mini skirt. The very full petticoats that were needed to keep them sticking out were banned at school! 😊.

    I think I must read these books.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

      They are such brilliant walks down memory lane, brilliantly written with such humour. You will enjoy them, Vivienne…

      Liked by 2 people

      1. alexcraigie Avatar

        Jaye and Anita, that is such a kind and emcouraging comment and I bless you for it. xx

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

          I think we need books like yours, Trish, so we can remember where we came from…

          Liked by 2 people

          1. alexcraigie Avatar

            That comment deserves to be printed out and given pride of place on my fridge. x

            Liked by 2 people

    2. alexcraigie Avatar

      A comment to make an old girl very happy, Viv! We have certainly lived through some exciting times and that includes the fashions we’ve experienced. I longed for those full skirts, but I was out of time and that style doesn’t seem to have resurfaced yet! :D

      Liked by 2 people

  7. Author Jan Sikes Avatar

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts on Trish’s book. It sounds like a great resource for that era, and yes I did grow up in the sixties. :)

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

      I am always amazed at how much Trish can include in these books!

      Liked by 2 people

    2. alexcraigie Avatar

      Thanks for the comment, Jan. The sixties were a remarkable decade and I have mainly fond memories of it!

      Liked by 2 people

  8. Pooja G Avatar

    The books sound wonderful. Although I didn’t experience the sixties, I did study them specifically and find them so fascinating.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Pooja G Avatar

      Oh and HNY, hope you have a great one.

      Liked by 2 people

        1. Pooja G Avatar

          Thanks! ☺️

          Like

      1. alexcraigie Avatar

        Thanks, Pooja! I feel lucky to have experienced the sixties first-hand. My grandchildren still listen to sixties music and find my stories of life then hard to believe. It’s strange when your life becomes part of ‘ancient’ history…

        Liked by 2 people

        1. Pooja G Avatar

          Yeah, it’s odd to think of ourselves as part of history. But the sixties sound like one of the best decades to have experienced so that’s something to cherish.

          Liked by 2 people

          1. alexcraigie Avatar

            I agree, Pooja!

            Liked by 1 person

    2. Jaye Marie and Anita Dawes Avatar

      Fascinating and illuminating. It’s amazing how much has changed since then…

      Liked by 1 person

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