Author Archive: Andrew Green

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In praise of indexes

November 3, 2023 0 Comments
In praise of indexes

These days librarians belong to a much-diminished profession (they’re not the only ones).  But once you’ve become a librarian there are some things that stay with you for good.  Among them is a commitment to the ideas of the collective provision of goods – as in ‘things that do good to people’ – and the […]

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Ruin’d universes: the paintings of George Little

October 28, 2023 5 Comments
Ruin’d universes: the paintings of George Little

Long before all-year sea bathing became de rigueur with the middle classes of Mumbles, if you were up early enough, on any day of the week and at any time of the year, you’d be able to spot two figures in the waves on Caswell Bay.  One of them was George Little.  Born in 1927 […]

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Cymru ar goll yn ‘Union’

October 21, 2023 1 Comment
Cymru ar goll yn ‘Union’

Bûm yn gwylio cyfres ddiwethaf David Olusoga at BBC2, Union, a wnaed ar y cyd â’r Brifysgol Agored.  Rhaid dweud bod y cymhelliad y tu ôl i’r cynllun pedair rhaglen yn un i’w ganmol: i esbonio sut y daeth y ‘Deyrnas Unedig’ i fod, a sut datblygodd y syniad, a’r realiti, dros y canrifoedd.  Y […]

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Perils of physics

October 14, 2023 1 Comment
Perils of physics

Who would have thought that anyone could write a novel about theoretical physics that it would be impossible to put down till you’d got to its end? But that’s exactly what Benjamin Labatut has done with When we cease to understand the world, published by Pushkin Press in 2020. Labatut is as universalist as his […]

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How to destroy a bus service

October 6, 2023 1 Comment
How to destroy a bus service

Cars and other private vehicles worsen global heating, endanger our bodies and health, poison our air and wreck our neighbourhoods.  Yet, instead of trying to encourage us to make less use of them, governments in the UK are busy doing the very opposite.  The UK government, cynically and absurdly, even declares that it’s fighting a […]

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The 20mph revolt

September 29, 2023 3 Comments
The 20mph revolt

I usually float through the sewage and green algae of political debate in the UK buoyed up by a comforting belief: that here in Wales people are in some way insulated from the worst of the reactionary and cruel madness that now passes for politics in Westminster.  Comforting, but, I fear, quite wrong.  The extreme […]

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St Illtud’s Walk, day 4: Penlle’r Castell to Pontardawe

September 22, 2023 0 Comments
St Illtud’s Walk, day 4: Penlle’r Castell to Pontardawe

No buses go anywhere near Penlle’r Castell, so C and I are lucky this morning to catch a lift by car.  It’s a bright autumn day, with good visibility and little threat of rain.  We’re back on the high moor in the middle of windmill land, and the path takes us through another turbine colony, […]

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Wandering in Meirionnydd

September 16, 2023 1 Comment
Wandering in Meirionnydd

In 1939, just before the outbreak of war, a woman called Hope Hewett published a book about her journeys alone on foot around Merioneth.  She has a genial and charming authorial voice, recounting her travels in the company of Jack, her faithful terrier, as they criss-cross their way across the county.  Today Hope and her […]

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Amddiffyn y rhestr fwced

September 8, 2023 1 Comment
Amddiffyn y rhestr fwced

Rhyw wythnos yn ôl, ar y rhaglen radio A Point of View, clywais i’r llais digamsyniol – a’r acen ddiog, lusg – o’r nofelydd Will Self.  Yn ei ddarn ymosododd yn chwyrn ar y bobl rheini sy’n cadw ‘rhestrau bwced’ o’u dyheadau i brofi pethau sylweddol, neu ymweld â lleoedd arwyddocaol, cyn eu bod yn […]

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The wrong trousers

September 1, 2023 2 Comments
The wrong trousers

Buying things is something I’ve got out of the habit of doing.  I make an exception for essentials like food, of course, and for books (though really books are just as essential for the mind as food is for the body).  It’s partly because consuming more and getting more things seem morally and ecologically dubious.  […]

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