Pages

Showing posts with label Maeve Binchy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maeve Binchy. Show all posts

Monday, July 30, 2012

Maeve Binchy

Maeve Binchy

I am sorry to hear today of the death at the age of 72 of writer Maeve Binchy. I often met her in the 80’s upstairs in Frank Lavery’s The Fleet Bar in Dublin opposite the back door to the Irish Times where she worked. Whilst a staff writer on The Irish Times her career as a writer was taking off after her first novel in 1982, Light a Penny Candle.



Maeve was totally without pretension or airs and graces and was always the centre of the company in The Fleet. She never lost her journalistic craft whether it was observing people in a launderette or a Central Line train. She split her time between London when she married the children’s author Gordon Snell and a little kingdom south of Dublin called Dalkey.


She went onto have worldwide success with Circle of Friends which was made into an excellent movie starring Minnie Driver and much of it shot in one of Ireland’s undiscovered gems the area of South Kilkenny along the Nore River around Thomastown and Inistioge.

A journalist, short story writer and best-selling novelist, Maeve was born in Dalkey in Co Dublin and studied at UCD. She initially worked as a teacher before becoming a journalist, columnist and later women's editor at the Irish Times. She then moved to London where she continued to work for the paper. Her early short story collections were based in London and Dublin and featured sharp, funny and often poignant observations of residents of those cities. 

Her finally observed domestic literature sold well and Minding Frankie achieved critical acclaim. In her books as in life she wore her heart on her sleeve. Sometimes unfairly reviewed her books were always well crafted and her characters finely observed, she was the Godmother of Chick-Lit and generous with her time in helping others. She sold more than 40 million books worldwide.





 She was a larger than life character in every way who relished people and the hustle and bustle of existence. The world will be less colourful and slightly less jolly without her.
 

Monday, August 15, 2011

Love and carriage Underground


Will Gull and Katie Crammer at beautiful South Woodford

The London Tube system is wrongly thought of as a sterile zone for personal interaction but the Greater London transport map is not called “London Connections” for nothing! Sometimes, on a crowded, sweaty jolting Tube train the personal interaction with an Aussie life support system for an armpit is unwanted but at other times, at those special other times eyes meet across the carriage. For undoubtedly the Underground joins up London and sometimes its claustrophobia facilitates people watching. Maeve Binchy’s novels mine the rich seam of meeting on the Underground. Poems on the Underground acts as a catalyst for romantic interludes and well, people have a tradition of making their own arrangements. So, stations and trains are places of memory and associations, happy and unhappy, for many living and working in London.

http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/06/poems-on-underground.html

So in the latest wizz of Cupid’s arrow two people who fell in love on the Underground have returned to the station where they got engaged as a married couple. Love is back on track for newlyweds at South Woodford station. A groom and his young bride returned to South Woodford Tube station in their wedding attire to let staff know they had just got married the day before (7 August) and to thank them.


The Love train

In December 2006 Will Gull and Katie Crammer looked across a crowded Tube carriage, passed each other a note, and fell in love. They began to chat and when they arrived at South Woodford Station they decided to go for a drink in a nearby wine bar, Switch.

Five years ago Mr Gull, then 30, glanced across the carriage and was stunned by Ms Crammer, then 27. He slipped her a note - "I think you are beautiful, from Will," with his mobile number - and she passed back the reply: "You're not so bad yourself, from Katie", also with her number.


Stefanie Schmiedel and Robert Gray’s environmentally friendly wedding travelling by Tube in 2008.

For the next few weeks the pair made calls and texts to each other, but it nearly all went wrong because incredibly they both lost their phones! Luckily they remembered the notes on which they had written their numbers and they got in contact with each other and have been inseparable every since.

Three years after they met Will treated Katie to a birthday meal at the Ivy. They travelled home on the Central line, and when they arrived at South Woodford Will told Katie she must get off because her birthday present was there. He then got down on one knee and proposed to her in front of commuters and station staff.



Katie, from Buckhurst Hill, said: "But for that fateful Tube journey I might never have met Will, fallen in love and married him, so I am very grateful to London Underground. The Central line and South Woodford station where Will proposed might not seem romantic to other people but they are special to me." She added: "Who would ever think an Oyster card would be such an aphrodisiac?" Who indeed!

For more Tube romance (sic) see;

http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/07/do-you-take-this-tube.html

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...