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lectrolove

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About lectrolove

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    Ecclesall

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  1. They regularly have big reductions in the store due to price matching. It's been my go-to store for decades for curtains, carpets, bedding, white goods and many, many other things. I'm heartily relieved it's staying.
  2. Open University are offering a huge range of free short courses. https://www.open.edu/openlearn/education/free-courses
  3. My Secret History by Paul Theroux. I'm really enjoying this, I've read some of his travel writing in the past but this is my first foray into his fiction. I'll have to seek out some more.
  4. I know you weren't asking me but here you go: https://www.thepostmillennial.com/exclusive-15-year-old-alleged-victim-of-jessica-yaniv-speaks-out/ Your defence of this individual is making you look a bit ridiculous.
  5. As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning by Laurie Lee. An account of a truly epic walk taken in the 1930s. I'm loving this, I've read Cider With Rosie a couple of times but never really considered this one until it popped up recently as a Kindle deal and I think it might be the better of the two. Absolutely hilarious in places.
  6. If you're making a special trip it might be worth giving them a call first. http://www.ecclesallfisheries.co.uk
  7. My husband likes kippers, he sometimes gets them from our local fishmonger next to the Prince of Wales on Ecclesall Road South. I don't eat them but they must be authentic if he buys them, he wouldn't accept anything else. Waitrose in Sheffield often has Craster kippers.
  8. That and boundary changes, the constituency includes Stannington now.
  9. It's a bit more expensive than most other Chinese/Japanese places but the food's a cut above too. Having said that it was always busy when we went and occasionally we struggled to get a booking which suggests people will pay for it. I'll be devastated if it's gone for good.
  10. Faces in the Water by Janet Frame. Where to start ... This a semi-autobiographical novel about mental illness and life in psychiatric hospitals in New Zealand in the 1950s. Uncompromising fare, strangely beautiful but stark and bleak, especially so as the author's real experiences form part of the narrative. Amazing but not a comfortable read.
  11. I hope you're right. But I was under the impression if he lasts until the next GE he's considered to have completed a term and can claim.
  12. The more cynical among us are saying the postponement is so he can hang on until a general election forces him out, then he can collect his severance pay.
  13. The Snakes by Sadie Jones. Family drama. This is ok but not brilliant. A while back I read The Outcast by the same author and really enjoyed it but this one isn't in the same league, it's just ok. No Mistaking Corker by Monica Edwards. A re-read of a kid's book that I read as a kid, along with many other books by Monica Edwards. Great! Deeply old fashioned but that's part of its charm.
  14. Recently finished Wakenhyrst by Michelle Paver, a tale of murder and madness set in the Fens in Edwardian times. A great read and very, well ... Fenny would be the word I suppose. Dank air, rotting vegetation and eels. Lots of eels. Just started The Places In Between by Rory Stewart, a chronicle of his walk across Afghanistan. Good so far.
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