Posted in Fiction

An exciting read but what is the truth?

It has been a busy week. Three classes at the gym this week. A business appointment in town with Mr P. Then a photo club meeting we habe had council workers of Hobart continue]ing to decorate our road out in front of our house for about the 7th week with their Stop/Slow signs.

The weather was so bad the other day we felt sorry for them and brought them big packets of biscuits. Mr. P has brought them doughnuts. They are almost like family. Our rates $ at work I guess with a whole new storm water system underground and now new paving on the road. 

But back to a book-

I am reading a captivating book. I should say I am listening to it. A non fiction book called The Long Walk:  The True Story of a Trek to Freedom by Slavomir Rawicz. Narrated by John Lee and he does a brilliant job. 

What’s it about? This is the blurb. 

””Slavomir Rawicz was a young Polish cavalry officer. On 19 November 1939 he was arrested by the Russians and after brutal interrogation he was sentenced to twenty-five years in a gulag.

After a three-month journey in the dead of winter to Siberia, life in a Soviet labour camp meant enduring hunger, extreme cold, untreated wounds and illnesses and facing the daily risk of arbitrary execution. Realising that to remain meant almost certain death, Rawicz, along with six companions, escaped. In June 1941, they crossed the trans-Siberian railway and headed south, climbing into Tibet and freedom in British India nine months later, in March 1942, having travelled over four thousand miles on foot through some of the harshest regions in the world, including the Gobi Desert, Tibet and the Himalayas.’

This is the kind of book that has you on the edge of your seat. I can’t even begin to imagine what this would be like.

Then six of them escape successfully. The book tells the story of how they did it. They even save a 17 year old girl who joins them on this trek and becomes very important to them. She was in dire straits herself so lucky to be taken in by these men. 

The book is told in the first person so it feels like I am sitting with the author hearing a riveting story.

Photo of Slavomir

I’m really enjoying this book. Every evening this week I am waiting to see what happens to them next. Then I go to Good Reads to mark it down as being read in my list of books and I come across this!

Wikipedia addition

“In 2006, the BBC released a report based on former Soviet records, including statements written by Rawicz himself, showing that Rawicz had been released as part of the 1942 general amnesty of Poles in the USSR and subsequently transported across the Caspian Sea to a refugee camp in Iran, leading the report to conclude that his supposed escape to India never occurred.[1]

In May 2009, Witold Gliński, a Polish World War II veteran living in the UK, came forward to claim that the story of Rawicz was true, but was actually an account of what happened to him, not Rawicz. Gliński’s claims have been severely questioned by various sources.[2][3] The son of Rupert Mayne, a British intelligence officer in wartime India, stated that in 1942, in Calcutta, his father had interviewed three emaciated men who claimed to have escaped from Siberia. According to his son, Mayne always believed that their story was the same as that of The Long Walk—but telling the story decades later, his son could not remember their names or any details. Subsequent research failed to unearth confirmatory evidence for the story.[4]

I understand there is also a film by Peter Weir-2010 called The Way Back. I don’t know if I will look this up. Hollywood can really ruin a good book but you never know. It has a good cast.

So now I have no idea what the truth is. Whatever the circumstances of this book I am not going to spend time researching it all. It is just a very “good read” as Harriett Gillbert would say.

Speaking of Harriett Gilbert (I am going to digress here a minute)…

She has recorded a podcast through BBC Radio 4 since 2011. It was called Books and Authors but is now entitled A Good Read. Each week she spends about 30 minutes with two guests. They come from all walks of British life. The three of them each pick what they think is A Good Read. Then all three of them read each book. The podcast is the discussion between each of them for about 10 minutes of so of what they thought of the book. I just love this podcast. They often agree but then when they don’t it is even. More fun. I certainly recommend this if you’re into podcasts.

I will continue with reading this book and just enjoy it for what it is. I just enjoy my evenings working on puzzles or my journals while I listen to yet another really good tale.

Until the next time….

Posted in Fiction

The Evolution of PENGUIN

This is a funny post. Today I turn 76. i can’t believe I have survived this world for so long. What is even funnier is I’m still playing with Penguins.

As some of you know, I began these posts in 2012 on Blogspot when I began collecting old vintage Penguin books published between 1935 and 1970 when the ISBN numbers came into play. I had a library of 3000 books from four continents. I gave talks to senior schools about the history of the books and tead everything I could find about them. I still have several reference books about them published by the Penguin Collector Society. As I got older I had to finally downsized and I sold the library between two book collectors. But I kept the little mascot that travelled with me.

I took him everywhere.

Penguin and I in Cornwall on a road trip with a friend.

At the end of each year I like to look at the coming year and see what changes I’d like to make. I think many of us do that to keep things fresh.

I’m going to bring back the original penguin. For those who followed me from the beginning you know I travelled a lot over the years and I took the Penguin with me in the drink holder section of my backpack. We travelled the world and Penguin was with me on six continents.

The old penguin featured in my blog for a few years. Then as time went on I changed the blog illustration with a different penguin. I took the penguin from Penguin books and changed him and added clothes that matched the theme of the post. I was learning photoshop and had different ideas about him.

The next generation.

Then AI came into photography and once again I changed the illustration of the Penguin.

Yet another transformation

As part of my photography and photoshop training and AI apps available I have decided I’m bringing back the original penguin.

Penguin and I visited Sydney. We love the Opera house.

He has sat on my book shelf for a long time. He has a history. He was with me in South America when I found the first Penguin publishing paperback there in Spanish. He travelled in a backpack in Africa. He had a bath in Singapore. He went to a formal tea ceremony in Japan. Th folks on that tour group took turns posing him in various Japanese settings.

When I went to Sydney to see a friend and she got Covid and I couldn’t see her, we drowned our sadness with a beer.

I have to say I have missed him. I have decided I’m getting him out of retirement and putting him back in the work force. He will continue to reflect the theme of my posts.

I have information that is coming out tomorrow about a Russian Gulag escape story I’m listening to. Old Penguin found a Russian coat and hat for that post. He looks quite the man.

I hope my online friends will be glad to see him again as we read books in 2026, go on photography day trips and just generally muck around in Hobart.

I’m hoping it will continue to increase my photography and editing skills and learn to use different apps to personalise our little guy.

For the days I want to go out and do something and no one is around to go too, the Penguin and I will continue our travels together with what lies ahead. 🌻🌻🌻

Posted in Fiction

Sharing my Travel Journal

The cover

I will start out with the statement- I Love Journals. I especially like looking at journals in book shops, overseas as I travel, on social media. Tik Tok has quite a few people who talk about their journals. Junk, Commonplace books, travel, daily, gratitude and on it goes. I know that tik tok has some dodgy content but I use the search bar for my interests and don’t see the other stuff. There are young people with their journals and there are older women who write, but I am going to crawl out of this rabbit hole and share my travel journal from Japan with you.

I need a big band to compress this thing.

From the moment I book the trip I start saving stuff. Flight info. Itineraries. A few photos from a travel guide. I also add a picture of the penguin from a small little printer I take with me. It prints my phone photos into small 2×3 stickers.

A coffee wrapper from hotel room, a receipt and a map.

Whilst travelling I don’t ever do as much as I want as after a morning sunrise shoot, early breakfast with the group, long days and socialising with before dinner drinks and long dinners I just get to my room, get things ready for the next day and collapse. But I do stuff everything I find into a bag and save what I can, then finish it when I get home. I don’t write much. There isn’t time.

One of the book’s illustrations

Instead I collect everything that is paper. Wrappings from snacks, labels from bottles if they are removable, tea bag wrapping, coasters, tour brochures, maps. I never know what I will find.

A few low value coins

Today I spread all that stuff out on my desk and began putting it all together. I still have blank pages so from now on I will cut out photos of Japanese items from magazines as I come across them.

A dinner menu of about 12 courses and a tour brochure

While browsing in Fullers one day before my trip, I came across a brilliant little journal that specifically stated ‘Japan’. There was another one beside it that said ‘France’. It made me want to research how many countries are represented by this publisher. I notice in the credits, that are in French, there is a web page. I’ve not looked at it yet but I will now I see it.

http://www.alibabette-editions.fr

The journal has some beautiful Japanese illustrations throughout the book plus other pages that are lined. Between the illustrations and the content I added it has turned into a beautiful little book.

Brochure from the castle we visited.

I hope you enjoy looking through some of the pages. As I seldom buy souvenirs in other countries (except journals) I find this is a wonderful souvenir. I will print out a few of my own photos and continue to add things to it.

A tea wrapper and a chocolate biscuit wrapper.

I hope you find it fun and maybe I’ll inspire you to think about the things you could pick up, travelling or on your own day trips. I find it adds purpose to any outing and very, very relaxing assembling it all.

A hotel receipt.

The back of journal

Publishers information

🌻 Penguin keeps his own journals. I can only guess what he writes about. 🌻