Author Archive: Andrew Green

rss feed

Cardiff Central Library: defend it or lose it!

February 1, 2015 1 Comment
Cardiff Central Library: defend it or lose it!

1    What has been lost “It’s hard not to feel utterly despondent at the current plight of public libraries. Along with the NHS and the BBC, our libraries are some of the few truly remarkable British institutions left. So often absolutely ordinary in appearance, a good library should offer escape routes down the most extraordinary […]

Continue Reading »

Cardiff libraries: a Council dispossesses its people

January 25, 2015 25 Comments
Cardiff libraries: a Council dispossesses its people

Cardiff is a thriving place. Big new developments are announced almost monthly. Recent ones include the new BBC Cymru Wales building near the station, the electrification of the Valleys railway lines and the massive Embankment complex. But while the Council pours resources into stimulating and supporting commercial growth, it leaves some of its basic public […]

Continue Reading »

Jimi Hendrix and Ludwig Wittgenstein in Swansea

January 18, 2015 10 Comments
Jimi Hendrix and Ludwig Wittgenstein in Swansea

That Jimi Hendrix came to Swansea was news to me until yesterday. It seemed almost as unlikely as the fact that Ludwig Wittgenstein used to stay here on his holidays. Gary Gregor, in his excellent South Wales Evening Post column ‘Hidden History’, says in his latest contribution that Hendrix visited the city in the 1960s. […]

Continue Reading »

Selling body parts in Little Hintock

January 13, 2015 0 Comments
Selling body parts in Little Hintock

After a visit to Dorchester we stayed on New Year’s Eve in a B&B high above Bradford on Avon. At midnight all the guests stood outside as fireworks blazed in distant towns and villages. The house, several centuries old, was full of books available for us to read, and one that took my eye was […]

Continue Reading »

Falling water and Coleridge

January 3, 2015 1 Comment
Falling water and Coleridge

‘The mad water rushes thro’ its sinuous Bed, or rather prison of Rock with such rapid Curves, as if it turned the Corners not from mechanic force, but with foreknowledge, like a fierce & skilful Driver; great Masses of Water, one after the other, that in twilight one might have feelingly compared them with a […]

Continue Reading »

Tranc sebon

December 29, 2014 0 Comments
Tranc sebon

Allech chi ddim dweud bod diffyg sebon, yn ei ystyr fetafforaidd. Er bod rhai yn dadlau bod ein cymdeithas wedi colli pob arwydd o ymostyngiad, mae seboni yn weithgaredd poblogaidd o hyd, yn arbennig yn y byd gwaith. Ac wrth gwrs mae operâu sebon yn rhygnu ymlaen, er bod rhywun yn synhwyro nad oes gan […]

Continue Reading »

The religion of inequality

December 21, 2014 0 Comments
The religion of inequality

The other day, for no apparent reason, I pulled off the shelf my old second-hand copy of R.H. Tawney’s book Equality. It still has a ragged and discoloured dust jacket, with a tea stain on the front, and it was well used before I bought it, for £1, on a date, unusually, I failed to […]

Continue Reading »

A brief history of austerity

December 14, 2014 2 Comments
A brief history of austerity

John Naughton observed the other day that neoliberal economists and their current weapon, austerity, have gained an unassailable intellectual hegemony. To claim that austerity is self-defeating and should be stopped is to be regarded as either foolish or mad. Ed Miliband, leader of a political party that was established – absurd idea! – to represent […]

Continue Reading »

Wales Coast Path, day 20: Burry Port to Kidwelly

December 7, 2014 4 Comments
Wales Coast Path, day 20: Burry Port to Kidwelly

A cold, still morning in Burry Port. The sun, they say, will shine all day. The four of us are the only people in the car park without dogs to share our walk. Feeling inadequate, we hurry on to the path, joining it at the point where the huge Carmarthen Bay Power Station once stood. […]

Continue Reading »

Wales Coast Path, day 19: Loughor to Burry Port

November 30, 2014 0 Comments
Wales Coast Path, day 19: Loughor to Burry Port

Loughor is a frontier town. Now just an extension of ‘greater Gorseinon’, it was once a place of more importance. The Romans planted an auxiliary fort on its headland, commanding the mouth of the river. The Normans built a small castle on the same spot, with the same intention – securing the invaders and depressing […]

Continue Reading »