The Year That Changed My Life (Part 6)
• April 14, 2018 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1989, Great Britain, Travel, Writing
Tags: Abi, Addison Road, American Express, AYH Auction, Bill Lockyer, Boston, Chester Place, Compton, Covent Garden, East Croydon, Ellen Terry screenplay, Found Drowned, Gatwick, Green Park, Guinness, Hilary, Holland Park, Kensington High Street, Leicester Square, Lindsay, Little Holland House, London, Maple House, Mayfair, McEwan's Scotch Ale, Melbury Road, Michael Robbins, National Portrait Gallery, Oxford Street, Pimlico, Richard Jefferies, Seven Stars Pub, Simpkins, St. Barnabbas Church, Surrey, Tass, Tate Gallery, Tell Me My Heart, Theatre Museum, Tottenham Court Road, Toynbee Hall, Trafalgar Square, University of Guildford, Warren Street station, Waterloo station, Watts Gallery, Wood Green
The Year That Changed My Life (Part 5)
• April 1, 2018 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1989, Great Britain, Theater
Tags: Abi, American gigolo, Baker Street, Bath, Bill & Lindsay Lockyer, Bristol, Choosing, Clapham, Clore Gallery, Colin Vaines, Covent Garden, Dr. Brian Hinton, East Croydon, Ellen Terry, Enigma Productions, Hamish, Highbury & Islington station, Joy Melville, Julia Margaret Cameron, Julie, London, Long Acre, Marble Arch, Palace Gates Road, Queen's Gate Mews, Redhill Street, Regent's Park, Richard Jeffries, Sir David Puttnam, Speaker's Corner, Stanhope Street, Stella Artois, Tass, The Wandering Moon, Trafalgar Square, Vanessa Redgrave, Victoria & Albert Museum, Watts Gallery, Wood Green
Approaching the Frontier
• July 6, 2017 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1988, 1989, Dad, girlfriends, Hopkins, Indiana, Lake Minnetonka
Tags: Abi Bilkus, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Ellen Terry, Fingerhut, Forest Gate, imagination, Julia Margaret Cameron, Lakewood Community College, Lindsay Clarke, London, mid-Victorian theater, proofreader, Ridgedale library, Roger Manvell, Sally, stargazing, storytelling, The Crowded Room, The Wandering Moon, Wood Green