Friday, 2 January 2026

Read All About It!

 Hello! I hope 2026 has got off to a good start. Thanks so much for your New Year wishes especially those of you who dared to step out of the shadows and bravely left a comment, it's lovely to meet you!

 Without further ado, here's a roundup of what I've been wearing this week...

  
On Tuesday I met up with a lady who had some vintage clothing for sale, coming back with a sackful of pretty decent stuff. I wore my vintage Kate Beaver velvet dress with the maxi length waistcoat I'd made from a pair of vintage 1970s Morris & Co Golden Lily curtains bought from a charity shop last year.

After watching Nuremberg the night before (if Russell Crowe doesn't win an Oscar for his portrayal of Hermann Göring there really is no justice in the world!) we decided that the evenings viewing needed to be a bit more light-hearted and settled on British, low-budget murder mystery, Medusa Deluxe, about a death at a hairdressing competition followed by The War Game, a BBC mockumentary about the threat of nuclear war, made in 1964 but considered so shocking that it wasn't screened until the 1980s (seriously disturbing, not one for the feint-hearted!)

On Tuesday (New Year's Eve) I gave this gloriously voluminous secondhand Naked Generation maxi dress an outing to another National Trust property (post coming up very soon!) It was a bitterly cold but beautifully sunny morning, one of those blissful days where you feel glad to be alive.


New Year's Eve isn't our thing. We stayed in and watched the deliciously gothic horror, The Cold Blue Eye and were in bed before midnight. We usually pop down to the pub on New Year's Day but instead spent the day pottering about, dropping off parcels, tackling some mending, tidying up and cracking on with my fiendishly difficult Cold War Steve jigsaw puzzle. 

I had stuffed this trippy 1970s Courtelle maxi into my festival suitcase ready for the Summer but decided it needed to be worn more often.


The evening film was one from a favourite genre of mine, the neo-Western, Hold The Dark, with the fantastic Jeffrey Wright. 


We awoke to snow this morning. It was rather precarious walking down to the baths at 7am but the weather did us a favour. Normally, at the start of January, the pool is full of people who've made fitness resolutions (and generally disappear after a couple of weeks) but the snow must have put them off and it was blissfully quiet. After a 'Spoons breakfast we had a look around the chazzas and I was delighted to find these stompy boots with the original manufacturer's tags still attached for £2.99. 


I wore the Naked Generation velvet dress my friend Annie kindly alerted me to when she spotted it on Vinted for £12 along with a vintage Kashmiri waistcoat which used to belong to my friend Cheryl. 


2025 was a great year for reading with me getting through a total of 103 books. I finished every book I started, there was nothing bad enough to abandon a few chapters in. I've highlighted my favourites. 




Reading List 2025

1. The 19th Wife - David Ebershoff
2. Manson: The Life & Times of Charles Manson - Jeff Guinn
3. Trust - Herman Diaz
4. The Trial - Rob Rinder
5. Milk Treading - Nick Smith
6. Snow Country - Sebastian Faulks
7. Dark Star: The Oral Biography of Jerry Garcia - Robert Greenfield
8. Look Who's Back - Timur Vermes
9. Girl, Woman, Other - Bernadine Evaristo
10. After You'd Gone - Maggie O'Farrell
11. Noddy Holder: Who's Crazee Now? My Autobiography
12. The Various Flavours of Coffee - Anthony Capella
13. What Was Lost - Catherine O'Flynn
14. The Familiars - Stacey Halls
15. Bound For Glory - Woody Guthrie
16. The Colossus of Maroussi - Henry Miller
17. When I Come Home Again - Caroline Scott
18. Medea - Rosie Hewlett
19. Americanah - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
20. My Father's House - Joseph O'Connor
21. American Spy - Lauren Wilkinson
22. The Apparition Phase - Will Maclean
23. Old Filth - Jane Gardam
24. The Winter Soldier - Daniel Mason
25. The Long Song - Andrea Levy
26. The Reluctant Fundamentalist - Mohsin Hamid
27. The Paris Library - Janet Skeslien Charles
28. The Swimmer - Joakim Zander
29. My Brilliant Friend - Elena Ferrante
30. The Story of a New Name - Elena Ferrante
31. Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay - Elena Ferrante
32. The Story of the Lost Child - Elena Ferrante
33. The Island of Sea Women - Lisa See
34. Kala - Colin Walsh
35. The Apple - Michael Faber
36. This Strange Eventful History - Claire Messud
37. The Seventh Son - Sebastian Faulks
38. The Tattooist of Auschwitz - Heather Morris
39. The Map of Love - Ahdaf Soueif
40. The Outlander - Gil Adamson
41. Flight Behaviour - Barbara Kingsolver
42. Helen of Troy - Margaret George
43. The Places In Between - Rory Stewart
44. The Bandit Queens - Parini Shroff
45. Ritual in Death/Missing in Death - JD Robb
46. The Night Ship - Jess Kidd
47. At the Edge of the Orchard - Tracy Chevalier
48. The Dovekeepers - Alice Hoffman
49. Big Jack - JD Robb
50. The Painter - Will Davenport
51. Francis Bacon in Your Blood - Michael Peppiatt
52. Death in Innocence - JD Robb
53. Ruby's Spoon - Anna Lawrence Pietroni
54. Burial Rites - Hannah Kent
55. The Sicilian Carousel - Lawrence Durrell
56. The Schoolhouse - Sophie Ward
57. The Last - Hanna Jameson
58. Cocaine Nights - JG Ballard
59. Black Dogs - Ian McEwan
60. Farewell Dinner for a Spy - Edward Wilson
61. Brotherless Night - V.V. Ganeshananathan
62. The Dance Tree - Kiran Millwood Hargrave
63. Needless Alley - Natalie Marlow
64. Politics on the Edge - Rory Stewart
65. Loyalty in Death - JD Robb
66. How To Kill Your Family - Bella Mackie
67. The Dark Circle - Linda Grant
68 The Drowned City - KJ Maitland
69. The Rapture - Claire McGlasson
70. Scarlet Town - Leonora Nattrass
71. Slaughterhouse 5 - Kurt Vonnegut
72. Underground Railroad - Colston Whitehead
73. The Fraud - Zadie Smith
74. The New Wife - JP Delaney
75. This Is How It Begins - Joan Dempsey
76. The Island of Missing Trees - Elif Shafak
77. The Dutch House - Ann Patchett
78. Evil Eye - Etaf Rum
79. The King's Mother - Anne Garthwaite
80. The Painter's Daughters - Emily Howes
81. Witchbourne - Rachel Grosvenor
82. Mrs Burke & Mrs Hare - Michelle Sloan
83. My Friends - Hisham Matar
84. The Shadow King - Maaza Mengiste
85. Asylum Road - Olivia Sudjic
86. The Quickening - Rhiannon Ward
87. What Lies Between Us - John Marrs
89. Mistress of the Art of Death - Ariana Franklin
90. Sanatorium - Sarah Pearse
91. The Twins of Auschwitz - Eva Mozes Kor
92. All For Nothing - Walter Kempowski
93. The Truth About Melody Browne - Lisa Jewell
94. Candlemoth - Roger Jon Ellory
95. Dear Fiona - Fiona Fullerton
96. Peel Me a Lotus - Charmian Clift
97. The Watchmaker of Dachau - Carly Schabowski
98. The Narrow Road to the Deep North - Richard Flanagan
99. The Two Roberts - Damian Barr
100. Damascus Station - David McCloskey
101. Prophet Song - Paul Lynch
102. The Confessions of Frannie Langton - Sara Collins
103. Femina - Janina Ramirez


 If I had to chose a book of the year I think it would be the 2019 Booker Prize winner Girl, Woman, Other by Bernadine Evaristo - it was an absolute delight. 


Must dash, Jon and I are off for New Year drinks and nibbles with friends and my hair needs washing. See you soon! 

46 comments:

  1. That jigsaw looked fiendishly difficult, I've given up doing jigsaws as a certain cat takes delight in distributing the pieces everywhere. I dropped a bag of stuff, clothes, books, sheets off to the charity shop along with a Lloyd Loom type chair, unfortunately just too big for where it needed to be and nowhere else to put it. Very cold here in Derbyshire and the paths and roads were like skating rinks. Xx

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    1. Hello Gill! I've moved the jigsaw to the utility room work surface as William kept rolling across the puzzle mat and destroying my efforts! I've just got the sky left to do now, the hardest bit!
      What a shame you had to donate your LL chair, I bet someone will be very happy with it! We've got a sack of domations to drop off - well, I did until Jon started rummaging in it and reclaiming things!
      It was -6°C on our walk down to the baths this morning but worth it to have the place almost to ourselves! xxx

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  2. Very nice naked generation dress snd i love your green festival dress too. It's freezing here so we are indoors in our jammies watching red eye and looking at holidays in Greece having revisited the advice you anf Jon sent me last year. It's probably going to be Corfu!

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    1. Thanks, Betty! Your day sounds perfect - holiuday planning and lounging around watching TV.
      I'd forgotten about Red Eye. I might give that a go after we've watched Frauds!
      I'm so excited that you're thinking of Corfu. We're looking for somewhere European and warmish to celebrate Tony's 60th in February! xxx

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  3. The green outfit is absolutely fantastic. The pattern of the fabric, the colors—it suits you so well.
    Happy new Year!

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    1. Thanks so much, Andrea! it seemed a shame to save it for festivals! xxx

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  4. thank you so much for your book list. I will definitely investigate your favoured ones.

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    1. Let me know what you think if you track any of them down! xxx

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  5. Happy New Year to you
    Siobhan x

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    1. Sending you my best wishes for a happy 2026, Siobhan. xxx

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  6. Lovely post, dear Vix, not only because of some fabulous outfits (I do love that maxi vest and your green outfit, and that last velvet beauty from Vinted!. Gorgeous!) but also because of your book list (thanks for that, I'll have a look at some of them!). So interesting to read about the films you've been watching too!.
    besos

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    1. Thanks, Monica! We try and watch a film every day at this time of year, it beats watching Xmas specials and celebrity nonsense!
      I love wearing that velvet dress, voluminous and warm - like a cosy blanket in dress form! xxx

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  7. Happy New Year! Love the trippy maxi dress. The colors are gorgeous! You beat my reading total by 3 books. I just went to my local library today and got out four.

    Carol

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    1. Hello Carol! 100 books isn't too shabby! I bet you'll have those four books finished in no time. I bought Jon the John le Carré book I'm currently reading for his birthday - but with me in mind. It's the only one of his I've never read! (I'm all heart!) xxx

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  8. Happy New Year to you both. I'm in awe of how many books you read in 2025. I'm ashamed to say I have a signed copy of Femina which was languishing under the bed and got rediscovered when we moved house. It's firmly back on the to be read pile!

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    1. Same to you, Gisela! You've had enough to deal with this year what with house moves and working full time to read. Once you start Femina you'll finish it in days, its absolutely fascinating! xxx

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  9. Love you in the green outfit it really suits you. Your book list is extensive. I agree about Girl, Woman, Other and I also love any Barbara Kingsolver book. The Rory Stewart books were very good too. My husband read them and said he thought I would like them and much to my amazement I did. Snow here yesterday but such beautiful blue sky and air like breathing champagne, I could put up with this. Regards Sue H

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    1. Hello, Sue! It sounds like we've got similar reading tastes what with Girl, Woman, Other and Barbara Kingsolver. I find Rory Stewart fascinating. Did you hear that Brad Pitt loved The Places In Between so much that he's bought the film rights?
      "Air like breathing Champagne"...I love that! It has been so beautiful lately. Walking to the pub in sub-zero temperatures last night was made a lot more bearable by that incredible Wolf Moon, too! xxx

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  10. Happy New Year, Vix. Thank you for sharing such velvet gorgeousness, you can't beat vintage cotton velvet for keeping out the chill in these dark days and with beautuful embroidery too! Some William Morris just adds to the fun and a riot of colour, pattern and texture. It boggles me how women can go about in beige joggers and a matching sweatshirt. Where's the fun in that? It must be like wearing a very dreary school uniform. I know of late I am getting a lot of wear out of my ' new' Précis red wool coat with inverted back pleat and black buttons that the charity shop lady had already fancied but was kind enough to say that it was just my kind of thing too. I've been wearing a recycled cashmere hat made by a local crafter and a lovely hand embroidered second hand scarf to keep out the cold. Much more fun . Keep flying the flag ,Vix for colourful and thoughtful dressing. Ban the beige!

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    1. Happy New Year, Alysia! You're right, velvet so cosy and, not being a fan of knitwear, it's my go-to fabric of choice on these icy days.
      Don't get me started on the jogging outfits. It's the beige ones I find particularly appaling, I often glance at women and think they're walking around naked!!!
      I can just visualise that lovely red Precis coat of yours. How generous of the charity shp lady to resist temptation and put it on the shop flor. I bet she was thrilled when she saw that it was going to a stylish and deserving woman!
      Your hat and scarf sound classy and fabulous! I was glad of a pair of maroon cable knit mittens some lovely lady had made especially to donate the the BHF last year, my hands were lovely and warm on our walk down to the swimming pool this morning! xxx

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  11. Green is definitely your colour, it lights you up and you look amazing in it - more green needed!! Just love every one of your posts, please keep on doing what you do so very well and thank you for colouring my days. Jan in Castle Gresley

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    1. Hello, Jan! How lovely to hear from you. That's such a lovely comment, thank you very much! xxx

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  12. Forgot about that dress! It was made for you. Impressive reading list and more impressive going swimming at that ungodly hour!! Up here on New Year's Day, we have what is delightfully known as the 'Loony Dook' (loony as in off your rocker and dook as in plunge underwater!). Thousands partake all over Scotland (we have a lot of nutters up here!). It's quite a spectacle.
    Alan Carr and Amanda Holden have a new fixer upper prog doing up a house in Corfu. Looks beautiful there.Happy New Year to both. (Which channel is Nuremberg on please?).xx

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    1. Forgot to add that the 'dook' is carried out in the sub zero temps of the North Sea!

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    2. Funnily enough, they were talking about the Loony Dook on BBC Breakfast yesterday morning. I'm okay with cold water swimming but I'm not sure I'd be that dedicated!!
      Alan and Amanda were filming that series when we were in Corfu last year, I've got a horrible feeling they've bought the house in Lakones that Jon and I wanted!
      Nuremberg's on Netflix.
      Very excited about Keith and the Throwdown later! xxx

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    3. Just as well you didn't buy that house! What a state and a sewage pipe in the strangest of places! Even Alan was nearly walking away!Looking forward to pottery prog. It's so calming!xxx

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  13. Wow, 103 books! That’s amazing. That jigsaw looks fabulous, is it Brum? I love all of your outfits as always xxx

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    1. Hello, Louise! I've always been a voracious reader. As a child, if I'd run out of library books I'd sit and read the telephone directory!
      Check out Cold War Steve on Facebook, he's an amazing Brummie artist with bang-on political views. xxx

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  14. I like the zingy green shades.on your dress. Perfect to brighten a dull winter's.day.

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    1. Thansk you! Yes, a dull day calls for a serious injection of colour! xxx

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  15. Happy New Year to you both. Gosh you did well with your reading, what a good mix of books too. I'm currently binge watching 'Lewis', I don;t know why I've never watched it before but I'm really into it. Anything that lets me sit in my chair nice and cosy and drink copious mugs of coffee, while consuming any of the Christmas food that might go off.

    Is that Benny from Crossroads peeping out from behind the building on your jigsaw?

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    1. Thanks, Sue! Last year seemed to be a really good year for finding Booker Prize winning (or runners-up) in the charity shops. I'm on the same wavelength as the judges, I think, as I'm never disappointed with them.
      I remember really enjoying Lewis back in the day, seeing how unhinged & vile Lawrence Fox has become in recent years, I'm not sure I'd be able to rewatch it for fear of throwing sonething at the telly!
      That is Benny from Crossroads. Cold War Steve is a Brummie. The artwork is called Benny's Babbies - Nikki and I stand in front of it in awe every time we visit Birmingham Art Gallery! xxx

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  16. I want to read more but just aiming for 25 books. I watch too much on screens so want to swap with getting on more walks and explores. I haven't found a good swimming option yet.

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    1. Hello Sam! 25 books sounds like a manageable option. It's too eay to get sucked into staring at a screen, I can understand how these kids get so addicted to them. Keep searching the swimming options, it doesn't feel like exercise, more like meditation! xxx

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  17. Happy New Year, Vix! I am what I call a chain reader, somewhat like a chain smoker but much less hazardous to the health. However, even I didn't read as many books as you in 2025. You have probably written about your reading habits in the past, but I would love a new post about how you manage to get so much book reading done as well as blogging, chazza shopping, traveling, swimming, and the list goes on! I'm sure a large part of your getting so much done, including reading, is the list of things that you don't do! That would be a fun list to read as well. Thanks, Vix!

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    1. Happy New Year, Tess! I hope the New Year finds you well. I love the term, Chain Reader! That's an interesting idea for a post, I'll try and put some thought into it! xxx

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  18. Late wishing you a Happy New Year....I hope 2026 blesses you with many, many more vintage treasures for your personal use and for you to make available to others who have the same appreciation of those valued items as you do.
    Also, I have to say that I usually have a favorite of some of the various dresses you wear and model, however, this time I love each and every one of these and the accessories. I wish I had 1 of each for myself. (Beware, I am not tiny like you.) Ranee

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    1. Thanks for the kind words and support, Ranee! Wishing you a very Happy New Year in return! xxx

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  19. My Books Read this year was pathetic, as Substack has stolen my time - only 24! But to be fair, one of them was a massive hardcover that derailed me for months!
    Love the stompy boots!
    No need to respond. XOS.

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    1. Hello Sheila! Considering you work full time and have a wild social life 24 isn't bad! xxx

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  20. 103 books! Wow that is truly amazing!

    Funny you mention Kashmiri. I bought a Kasmiri shawl the other day and would love to know more about it. I'm not sure if that is the name of the material or something else...
    X

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    1. Hello Jess. Kashmir is a region of India, famous for its papier mache and wool work! x

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    2. OOo I think my shawl must be wool then. X

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  21. You were very well dressed!!! I love the Baked Generation velvet!
    The book list is great! You exceeded my yearly total by 2! I'm intrigued by lots of them! That funky, green dress absolutely should not just be saved for festivals!!!

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Thanks for reading and for leaving a message. Please don't be anonymous, I'd love it if you left a name (or a nom de plume).

Lots of love, Vix