Showing posts with label Cornwall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cornwall. Show all posts

Friday, 22 July 2011

Clearly deeply mad



Well folks over the last few weeks The Escape Committee has been getting a lot of press. Austin and I have already been in the West Britain, the Cornish Guardian and the Newquay Voice. Yesterday I was invited to visit BBC Radio Cornwall in Truro to have a chat, live on air, with the splendid Martin Bailie. Everyone was really friendly, in particular the shows brilliantly cheerful producer Joy. As we all sat in waiting to go in Joy took the time to put me at ease before I went on air.


Martin Bailie and Matthew Button: Photo Nicole Fenton

Joy claimed that an interview with Martin would be just like having a chat and I would hardly even notice I was live on radio. And that was certainly true although Nic, my girlfriend, said she could tell I just how nervous I by the way I swung my legs under the chair (like a child, D'oh!).

Introducing me to the listeners as being 'possibly clearly, deeply, mad' Martin gently got me to talk about the trip, the car and the history. We talked about the motivation and the challenges of getting all the paperwork and parts in order. We chatted about the problems of getting through Syria and the new water pump. Then within two light seconds we were finished and I could draw a breath.

Just as promised it was like going to the dentist...never as bad as you imagine. I was even brave enough to have a listen on the BBC Iplayer (click the photo below if you want to have a listen). Martin and Joy will be staying in contact and following me on Twitter and i have been asked to go back in when and if i get back to tell the tale of the Escape Committee.

Job done, time to celebrate in the Kathmandu Palace (the home of the best curry in Cornwall I might add) and review. It wasn't as hard as I thought. I was a lot less squeaky than I thought I would be, but strangely a lot more nasal (i sounded like I had a cold).At least I didn't swear. But I didn't mention that the Escape Committee is going to be a book (hopefully) so lets just make it clear here-

 the Escape Committee is going to be a book (hopefully).


I hope everyone who listened enjoyed it.
have a good week folks

And if you're off to the Port Eliot Festival make sure you come and see us at the Profwriting Tent. 
Cheers Matt

Wednesday, 20 July 2011

BBC Radio Cornwall


Just a quick reminder ,
I've been invited to BBC Radio Cornwall to talk about the The Escape Committee. I'll be in the studio at about 3:30.  
A bit nervous ....

Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt

Wednesday, 13 July 2011

Woohoo! Triple figures!!



A big thanks to everyone for all their wonderful support even before I've left. Today the Escape Committee Facebook page has reached triple figures.
Brilliant thanks again. On a sad day it was a ray of sunshine.
Click on the image below if you'd like to join to.




Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt

Wednesday, 6 July 2011

The media onslaught begins


Hi Folks, it's been a great week. The Escape Committee has been in all the local papers.



The Cornish Guardian

Both the Cornish Guardian ran articles on the story. Although neither of them put any contact details or mention this blog, which was a bit of a disappointment. Newquay Voice however made the effort to call me and a lovely Sarah Morcom interviewed me and wrote it up for the next weeks addition. 

Newquay Voice

Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt




West Britain 

Thursday, 23 June 2011

Who's going to Port Eliot Festival? We are.


Last year I was invited to read at the Port Eliot Festival at St. Germans.
On a beautiful day I stood up in front of a bunch of people I had never meet and stumbled my way through a reading from In The Almond Groves of Samarqand, my Silk Road book. 





This year I have been invited again, but this time I'm suppose to bring Austin. There'll be mega stars of words, music and art, but I'll be there too. I'll be reading on Saturday and Sunday if anyone would like to come along. The very next day I pack up and head off for London and then Belgium. All a bit nerve wracking really. 


Come along meet and Austin and say hello




Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt



Thursday, 16 June 2011

Which way to begin?



The steps along the road may have begun with the purchasing of Austin but the first real move must surely be the ferry crossing from our tiny island to the continent. 

     In the original journey Mum, Dad and Jim, along with my uncle Mickey and his wife Barbara, made the crossing from Dover to Ostend in Belgium, where they camped for a week while they got their bearings. Mickey and Barbara would soon head back to Blighty and the others would head first to Germany, then further eastwards. 

photo by James Holmes


          And this was my plan, too.
        However, a quick look through the Lonely Planet guide book lead me to believe that the only ferry routes today between Ostend and the UK link to Hull and Scotland. Hardly convenient for someone driving up from Cornwall. 
       So I was left with one of two choices; drive to hull and across to Ostend or leave by the original exit of Dover. If i chose Dover then I would have to cross first to Calais, then head north along the French coast, cross the border into Belgium and then head for Ostend. Not a great position to be in. Eventually after a bit of thought I decided that, bearing in mind the price of fuel these days (I've certainly picked the wrong time to do an intercontinental road trip haven't I?),  the cheapest and probably the quickest option would be the Dover- Calais route.
          Then while trying to organize a ticket I discovered that there is still a route from southern England to Ostend -via Ramsgate. Brilliant!, well not Ramsgate, but rather as second option.
         Grabbing the bull by the horns I clicked across to the Ramsgate-Ostend route and began typing in my details. Everything was going fine until it came to "Car Make". I went through the drop down menu and, of course, there is no option for AUSTIN. Okay, then let's try OTHER, which allows me the opportunity to actually type in the make and model. After carefully typing in Austin- Cambridge- A60 the system had a little think and then promptly sent me back to the beginning as if I had been sent to the back of the queue by some over officious clerk. A second extra careful round of typing got the same result- Computer says no! It seems that the world of internet and 1960's cars aren't aligned. So, tomorrow I'll have to call and do it the old fashioned way-on the phone. 
          Wish me luck

Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt

Saturday, 23 October 2010

Autumn Gold

Saturday, 9 October 2010





In a previous blog I wrote of the death of summer but that the real wealth, for those who live here, is often, or usually the golden autumns that we are lucky enough to have.
        To be fair over the last few weeks it wouldn’t have been easy to back up this statement. The rain and wind battered us about with a glee that seemed almost personal.
   Reading up on the next world contest over in Portugal, someone’s tweet read something like -’eight foot last night, two foot this morning, twenty foot predicted for tomorrow’. So we knew something was on the way, but as I turned the corner on to Pentire and craned to see the ocean across the golf course at Fistral beach, I caught a glimpse of a beautiful A-frame feathering in the off-shore wind. 
        An hour after I had finished teaching I snatched up my camera and dashed across the road and along the path at south Fistral. What a beautiful evening! The air was still warm and the winds, unlike today, were just strong enough to feather the sets without messing up the sea. The tide was as high as it’s possible to get without climbing the dunes into the golf course. Across the bay each set meant four to five peaks from north to south with a extra pair at little Fistral. 




South Fistral at dusk
        Until last year I hadn’t surfed Fistral in well over a decade. I felt it was overcrowded and overrated. With so many other beaches why struggle your way through the tourists to get a wave when there were so many quieter spots to choose from. But a mate from Bristol was down and he and his friends were already in the car park getting changed so in I went. Okay it wasn’t a revelation but more simply a realisation- that there may be a hundred surfers in the water but only ten of them are catching anything, the rest were just cannon fodder for the sets. It turned into a fun session, punchy and fast. 
        Since then I have had a bit more of a soft spot for Fistral, but rarely enough of one to drive into town. Yet last night was so beautiful, so clean, so beguiling that for the first time in ages I actually thought about shirking my responsibilities, struggling into my winter suit and getting my flabby arse back in the sea. 
        Time to sort out some work-life balance me thinks.
Have a good week
Matt

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

Port Eliot part 3- this time it’s personal





Okay this will be my third and final blog on the festival. I thought I’d mention about the tent itself and terrors. I think most people can relate to the horror of standing up in front of an audience and reading aloud. I think I mentioned this before, but I can stand up in front of an audience and talk until the cows come home (I know a lot of people struggle with this) but reading is a very different matter.
We all get nervous and then what happens? We start to shake. So now I'm are trying to read from a script that keeps bobbing up and down. As I'm talking about stopping for dinner and  grabbing a snack of sparrow’s bum I reach the end of the line and move down only to realize that I'm about to stop and grab a snack of sparrows bum again! I’ve nearly read the same sentence twice. Whoops! So I do what everyone does and I jump too far back then can’t find either where I finished or where I were going. Then I get more nervous and the whole thing starts over again. The throat dries up and as if they knew what was going on my wisdom teeth decided to grumble all day. All this and   I was still trying to move on from sparrow’s bum snacks.
                                                                   
The Colosseum 
I suppose the answer is to have memorised your work so well that you simply repeat it out loud rather than actually reading it. And although it sounds obvious now I didn’t think of this until I watched the poets in the tent. Each of them was brilliant. There were pieces on O.C.D and A.C.D.C, on Hash cakes and Hadron Colliders, but each were smooth and professional. They knew their pieces inside and out and were able to recite them rather than read them. It gave each piece a drama and an air of performance that I certainly couldn’t match. 


The Arena
            As Jane Pugh called up each of the readers there was a sinking feeling that I hadn’t prepared enough. Eventually I could no longer hide behind the other students and made my way up to the front, where the carpeted floor was as even as a pitching ship. Each of us had to stand in front of a microphone, which was recording our work for The Source FM, and an impressive video camera whose nefarious purpose was never revealed to me. The audience, the mic and the camera really helped to settle my nerves I can tell you.
       A deep breath got me through the first piece about a lady archer I watched one morning in Kamakura, Japan, which became the opening of my Silk Road manuscript. And then, because we only had 3-5 minutes to read, I asked the audience whether they would prefer an embarrassing piece (from the Beijing chapter) or an execution piece (from the Uzbekistan chapter).  Taking up Jane’s lead the assembly of course asked for ‘embarrassing’ and so a little more relaxed I told them of the tale of the Beijing Hairdressers. There were a few laughs and everyone was very kind and then it was done. All that was left to do was open my gifts for performing while watching a brilliant piece by a young poet who had cut up a news article from the nineteen thirties and made it into a very funny and original piece.


I learned a lot in a small space of time and look forward to having a second stab at it next year! 

Before next year I’ll buff up my wellies and my accent, too.



Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt

Monday, 26 July 2010

Port Eliot Festival. PART 2- on the day



A frighteningly posh ginger ten -year old gave me perfect directions to the ProfWriting tent and then went about his business of advertising someone’s food stall with a cardboard sign. And what food! No hotdogs here, nope, it was all falafels, Jamaican goat curry and Jamie Oliver’s Fifteen.  This was by far the poshest festival I’ve ever been to; I felt simultaneously over and underdressed. Wearing a pair of clean Vans seemed a little over the top when everyone else had wellies on, yet again a pair of jeans and a shirt were very drab when compared to the plethora of fairies and fashionistas swathed in tinfoil and warning tape. 
                According to the brochure this was the seventh Port Eliot Festival and that only 18 paying guests presented themselves at the first one. Festivals are big business in the British summer now and if I can use the misquote ‘if you build it, they will come’. And come they have. The parks and gardens of the Earl of St. German were positively humming with visitors on a muggy Saturday in July. 




                I had a few hours before I had to embarrass myself in front of people so I went to see who I could find.  Sadly I had already missed the River Cottage people. Hugh Fearnnley-Whittingstall’s talk (on Friday) probably had a recipe for raw elk’s bladder on toast or maybe artichoke and afterbirth flan, that said it is all part of Hugh’s eccentric charm and the River Cottage BLTs were very highly praised by all who had the patience to queue. 
          Firstly I went to see the most splendid Diana Athill, OBE. The award winning novelist and memoirist has been the editor to a number of famous and respected authors. This lovely doyenne of publishing and editing was recently honoured with a BBC Imagine with Alan Yentob. She showed herself to be every bit as sharp, funny and eloquent in the tent as she had on TV, not bad for a ninety-year-old. The only downside to the event was that she and the interviewer (the editor Ian Jack) hadn’t been mic’d up properly and consequently you could only hear half of what was said. Sadly this meant that the fat female Aussie behind felt the need to bellow ‘Can you get her to speak into the F**king mic’; not the sort of thing you yell at ninety-two-year-olds, or anyone really. Ms Anthill talked of writing as a therapy as IPhones were held aloft to photograph and video her. She talked of her work with VS Naipaul and how his depressions was a ‘challenge’ and that editing often had more in common with nannying then anything else. There was the warm aroma of canvas and while she laughed about an over-eighties dating agency she had been invited to join some of the audience put down their BlackBerries long enough to do a little knitting. 



Ian Jack & Diana Anthill, OBE
               
 After a lunch of goat curry and rice and beans I sat beneath a beech tree in the Walled Garden and listened to Alexander Masters (author of the most splendid Stuart: a life backwards, go and read it.) and Sam Leith chat about the madness and magic of mathematicians. Alexander had chosen to add a little cabaret by dressing as a man-sized number seven.  What I heard between two kids called Neco and Rupert being reprimanded was fascinating and funny and I look forward to reading their new books when they come out. 


Sam Leith and Alexander Masters (Number Seven)
                There was little else I could do after that but go and prepare for my session in the Profwriting tent. I stopped in to watch a little of Martin Parr’s talk about hoarding but my mind was elsewhere, so I went and sat on the hill over looking the secret Tamar estuary that Kate Rew’s Wild Swimmers would venture into after tea, and pulled out my notes …


Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt

Thursday, 22 July 2010

Port Eliot invite.



Part of the appeal of writing has always been the anonymity, you can hide behind nom de plume and it’s perfectly acceptable to be a recluse. But this Saturday 24th July I will have to do the opposite. I have been invited and when I say invited I mean coaxed, cajoled and lightly bullied into reading at the Port Eliot literary festival 
      Brilliant, but really scary. Well there comes a point in every writer’s life when he has to stop showing work to ‘safe’ audiences and face real listeners and readers. Now let’s put things into context; firstly it is an honour and I’m both excited and terrified, secondly it’s not as if I’ve been invited to co-host Jarvis Cockers radio  6music show or asked to help Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall cook up a light lunch of Rabbit-a-la-road kill. My tutor merely asked me if I would read 10 minutes of my scribblings from my Silk Road manuscript. 
       I’ve read books by Geoff Dyer, Diana Athill and Alexander Masters, all of whom will be there. It was terrifying enough to do it in school (my formative years in skiving stem from a horror of English classes and reading aloud) but what if someone actually comes into the Prof reading tent?They might actually hear me, sorry that’s the nerves talking. 
Okay off to choose what to read. 


Have a good week folks
Cheers Matt