Skip to main content

GIFT BOX: Happy World Environment Day from Gower Lavender and poet Rae Howells

 


Happy World Environment Day from Gower Lavender and poet Rae Howells who say:

We are choosing to celebrate the bees, they are why we do what we do...
Why not join us in celebrate with a Bee lover's Lavender Gift Set
Pay tribute to the humble bumble bee with a lavender gift set that’s sure to delight the bee lover in your life. We’ve stuffed this unique hamper with a gorgeous selection of bee-inspired local loveliness, from a beautiful book of bee-inspired poetry, The language of bees, a jar of Gower honey from the hives at Little Walterstone Farm, a Gower-made beeswax candle, a Gower-made bee decoration, a honey dipper, a beeswax lip balm and a bar of our signature lavender soap.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Open newslist

Guardian open up their newslist. Helpful and insightful or another step towards the takeover of less-informed citizen journalism and media cost-cutting/ job cuts? Discuss... More:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/series/open-newslist?fb=native In other media news... The Times and Sunday Times cut 150 editorial posts More:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/oct/20/times-job-cuts?fb=native

GIG ALERT: Natalie Ann Holborow at Uplands Poetry Night, Swansea

 

BOOK REVIEW: 'It deserves to be read far more widely.'

In her engaging review essay 'Fantastical Doubles and Split Selves' in the latest issue of New Welsh Review , author of The Word, JL George, looks at responses to trauma in three recent novels including Fox Bites by Lloyd Markham . Here are three of our favourite snippets: ‘Lloyd Markham’s first full-length novel Fox Bites , set in early-2000s Zimbabwe, takes a similar tack, colliding social upheaval – as viewed through the sometimes-uncomprehending eyes of a young, neurodivergent boy – with smaller, more personal disruptions. The young protagonist, Taban, suffers bullying and isolation among his peers after his family splits apart: his aunt, uncle, and beloved cousin Caleb moving away to a farm which will later be seized during land reforms.’ ‘Taban must resist the temptation to become part of a cycle of abuse, thereby becoming a conduit for the destruction of his world. Although the stakes of the book eventually become world-threatening in the expected way of science fiction...