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Saturday, 10 May 2008
Storm in a teacup?

In this week's Spectator, Byron Rogers reviews Sarah Anderson's memoirs:

I must declare an interest at the outset. Thirty or so years ago I went out, or walked out (or whatever the phrase is), with the author, until, that is, the night when, for reasons I have never been able to establish, she hit me over the head with a stainless-steel electric kettle. You may not have read a book review starting quite like that.

No, I can't say I have.

At the time all she said was, ‘You were being even more irritating than usual’, so, reading her memoir, I turned nervously to the chapter entitled ‘Men, Love and Sex’ but found no reference to me or the kettle. As a friend said of his time with an eminent woman writer, ‘Chap before me, he got a short story. I didn’t even get a sonnet.’ Reading Halfway to Venus, an inspired title, I find I now sympathise with the way he said it, part miffed, part relieved.

On reflection, I think the kettling may have had something to do with the fact that I had come on a fascinating little footnote in Macaulay about her ancestors, the Catholic Earls of Perth, who, in their attempts to run Scotland as a police state for James II, in a moment of genius introduced the thumbscrew into the country. This I gleefully passed on, and passed out.

As I am past the age of storming out, I am certainly past the age of hitting irritating men with kettles. I haven't hit anyone since I was ten, and besides, my kettle is plastic and wouldn't hurt a fly. That said, I could do some serious damage with my Breville sandwich toaster. I may as well find a use for it.

Posted on 9:53 AM by Mary Jackson
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