Book Bodega, Harbour Street, RamsgateWelcome to New London book signingLove this desk they provided for the signingCathy Rogers, Bob and Roberta Smith, me, Heidi, Dad, Jessica Voorsanger
What wonderful Sunday afternoon at Book Bodega in Ramsgate signing copies of Welcome to New London – journeys and encounters in the post-Olympic city. It’s a real gem of a bookshop and this was in fact my first signing outside London. So lovely to share the event with friends and family and meet regular viewers of my YouTube channel.
After the book signing we walked above Ramsgate’s Royal Harbour and settled in the Churchill Tavern for a couple of pints of Canterbury Ale nestled on a corner that’d been sketched by Vincent Van Gogh during his time in the town.
Thanks so much to everyone who came.
There are signed copies of Welcome to New London available from Book Bodega.
I love ‘following the scent of a clue’, to borrow one of Gordon S. Maxwell’s types of topographical rambles as described in The Fringe of London (1925). And this was an incredibly enticing clue sent via an Instagram DM. TimeWandererChris asked me what I knew about the holy well in Valentines Park, Ilford. What?, I thought. On all my countless walks through Valentines Park, and the reading for those explorations, I’d neither come across references to a holy well nor seen anything that looked remotely like a holy well. Not even when presenting a radio show on Ilford with Nick Papadimitriou for Resonance fm in 2011. This would surely be a wild goose chase. The resulting walk a couple of weeks ago, in the video above, proved to be a revelation.
After appearing on BBC 5Live I took a Sunday stroll through Central London to a WW1 memorial with special family significance. My walk starts at BBC Broadcasting House then passes through Cavendish Square where I explore the history and the architecture of the area. I continue down Wigmore Street past Wigmore Hall and the wonderful art deco splendour of the first Debenham department store at 33 Wigmore Street.
Passing Marylebone Lane we see where the buried River Tyburn passes underground. I then went down St Christopher’s Place and Gee’s Passage and briefly along Oxford Street before turning up James St with a nod to Selfridge’s. Crossing Oxford Street I walk down Duke Street and take a look at the Improved Industrial Dwellings Company buildings around Lumley Street and Balderton Street. These are fine examples of Victorian ‘model dwellings’ built in the 1880s to provide good quality housing for working people. My next stop was the former U.S Embassy building on Grosvenor Square and then turned into Brook Street which took me to Hyde Park.
I strolled along the wide paths revelling in the majestic autumn colours of the leaves. The focal point of my walk was the Memorial to the Machine Gun Corps who my grandfather, William Rogers, served with during the first world war. The memorial can be found on Hyde Park Corner near the Wellington Arch.
Sound of a babbling brook in Epping Forest that runs from just south of High Beach through Hill Wood to Fairmead Bottom. I can’t seem to find a name for this beguiling rill.
Recorded on a very cold December afternoon while walking from Chingford to Loughton.