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Photo-a-day 42: Light dusting

CZ20140211224218410

We’ve had just a light dusting of snow here in Newcastle this evening. This winter (so far!) has been considerably lighter on snow than the last few, which has been a relief!

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Photo-a-day 41: Crisps

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I don’t very often eat crisps, but these are really quite delicious… as an occasional feature in a well-balanced diet, of course.

This post was filed under: Photo-a-day 2014, Scrapbook.

Photo-a-day 40: Wendy’s new car

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She wishes…! Personally, I’d prefer something a little more practical that could get over speed bumps rather than crashing into them!

This post was filed under: Photo-a-day 2014, Scrapbook.

Photo-a-day 39: Tea

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This post was filed under: Photo-a-day 2014, Scrapbook.

Photo-a-day 38: Abstract flower

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This post was filed under: Photo-a-day 2014, Scrapbook.

Weekend read: It’s a services world

Weekend Read

So convinced was he of customers’ vitriol for subscription services, the late Steve Jobs famously told Rolling Stone “I think you could make available the Second Coming in a subscription model and it might not be successful”. Yet, a decade later, there has been an explosion in the popularity of subscription services. My pick for this weekend’s read is this article by Manu Rekhi on PandoDaily, where he discusses the ceaseless rise of the subscription service, and explains how $1.99/month can net a company millions.

This post was filed under: Weekend Reads, , .

Photo-a-day 37: Royal Festival Hall

CZ20140206191221359I’m just back from a very pleasant evening listening to the Philharmonia Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall. I’ve never been inside there before!

This post was filed under: Photo-a-day 2014, Scrapbook, .

Photo-a-day 36: Shangri-La

CZ20140205201514658This is the recently unveiled waterfall style sign for the Shangri-La hotel at The Shard. Suites in this hotel come with your own dedicated butler… and, no doubt, a price tag to match!

This post was filed under: Photo-a-day 2014, Scrapbook, .

Review: Chocolate Wars by Deborah Cadbury

Chocolate Wars tells the history of chocolate manufacturer Cadbury, from founding to controversial sale to Kraft. Interwoven into the story are histories of other confectionery manufacturers whose names have become synonymous with sweets: Fry, Rowntree, Lindt, Hershey, Suchard, Terry and many others besides. Of course, the author is herself a member of the Cadbury family, lending a personal tone to the narrative. Of course, as with any story of this type, there’s a good dose of social history in the mix as well.

This should be a book I enjoyed. I like a bit of social history, and I like a good business story. I enjoy biographies, and I enjoy chocolate. And this book has won high praise from almost everyone who has reviewed it. Yet I’m afraid that I struggled to get through this book. Others have called it ‘pacey’ and ‘thriller-like’, but I found it a little like wading through treacle in two respects: it was hard to get through, and far too sweet.

An example of the former from early in the book, there is seemingly endless discussion of the qualities of “Iceland Moss”, a profoundly unsuccessful early Cadbury product.  It felt like there was an awful lot of description of the product, and of its lack of success, but also – and this seems to be a problem throughout – discussion of the intentions and feeling of the Cadbury brothers when developing the product. The evidence cited for drawing these conclusions about motivations is often poor, and feels like it has been imposed, rather than simply reported, by the author. But perhaps this is unfair; perhaps the feelings and motivations were well-researched and accurately reported. But that simply isn’t how Chocolate Wars felt to me: it felt wearingly revisionist.

As an example of the latter, Chocolate Wars seems to expect the reader to respect the Cadburys for abandoning their principles in favour of profit early on, attempting to reintroduce them as they returned to profit, and then gradually eroding them again. I’m afraid I found all of this rather tiresome. I understand that the family faced a moral dilemma, choosing between values and success, but their continual inability to choose a side of the argument and pursue it is frustrating. There are parts of the narrative where it seems that the Cadbury family are virtually abusing their workers, and yet it seems that the reader is expected to sympathise with the owners, not the workers, whose discomfort is almost brushed over.

I don’t mean to imply from this description that Cadbury Wars induced strongly negative feeling about the Cadbury family. The book didn’t move me to strong feelings about anything. I am describing my frustrations with the text in an attempt to explain why I found it so profoundly dull – but in doing so, I think I may have inadvertently highlighted the more interesting debates.

The only way in which this book really affected me was that I bought some Rowntrees Fruit Pastilles, which I haven’t bought for years, after reading an extended description of them in the book. And I enjoyed them.

I find it hard to fully justify why I enjoyed this book so little, particularly when others have felt so positively towards it. Perhaps it is reflective of my mood as I read, or perhaps I hold some unidentified negative association with Cadbury. I certainly can’t recommend Chocolate Wars, but my single note of disapproval shouldn’t put you off: there’s a chorus of celebration of the brilliance of Chocolate Wars, so perhaps it’s worth reading anyway.

Chocolate Wars

Chocolate Wars is available now from amazon.co.uk in paperback and on Kindle.

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Photo-a-day 35: Leaky roof

CZ20140204064435300The roof of Newcastle Station is a marvel of Victorian engineering… but I can’t help but think that it might seem still more marvellous if it didn’t leak quite so much…!

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