Book Club 2025: 1222 by Anne Holt

Easter is mystery book time in Norway. It’s been speculated that it all started because people went off to do skiing in the mountains, and they needed some light reading for the evenings (or when they were snowed in), but I guess it’s just One Of Those Things: A thing happens randomly, and then it gets attention, and before you know it, it’s a national holiday.

But this is one of those sacred traditions I adhere to, so I’m reading mysteries this week.

This is an old book by Anne Holt, who was the minister of justice for like a couple of months a few decades back. (Or something.) This is a very appropriate book — it takes place at a snowed-in hotel in the mountains, and then a couple of priests are killed! Who could it be!

I like Holt’s books, but this is pretty annoying. The only way she drives the plot forward here and maintains tension is by having everybody be interrupted all the time. So someone will come up to the protagonist and say “I know who killed that priest! It’s… it’s… Oh I gotta go!” OK, there’s one other trick she uses: Vagueness. A guy will come up to her and go “You know that guy? Well, he and I… Oh, I gotta go!”

So it’s really, really bad, and I guessed who the killer was halfway through (there was really only one candidate), but still: It’s pretty entertaining? It’s corny as hell, but it’s fine.

1222 (2007) by Anne Holt (3.35 on Goodreads)

Everything Is Bad Now pt LVII: PG Tips

For years I’ve been looking for a good “standard” tea. You know, just something you can drink in the morning while you’re too tired to make any decisions, or brew tea properly.

But I’ve been doing all these various weird fancy teas, and I like them all. Mostly TGW, who has amusing teas like the Japanese one that yields only 15 kilos per year, but none of the trees are ever exposed directly to the sun, and stuff like that. And I’ve learned what “FTGFOP1” means! (Finest Tippy Golden Fsomething Orange Pekoe First Flush. (Oh, yeah, the second F stands for Flowery.))

But choosing one is too much work in the morning, and perhaps I don’t want a tea that has reads web site “grassy, fishy notes” first thing in the morning. I wasn’t successful in finding A Standard One until a year and a half ago, when I read that PG Tips was the most sold brand in the UK. I gave it a try, and…

It was great! Many of the “standard” cheap brands, like Yorkshire Gold and stuff, have a slightly unpleasant bitterness going on. Others, like Lipton, just taste awful all around. Twinings has several blends that are fine, but they’re all slightly annoying in one way or another — too weak, too strong, too bitter, too sweet, too whatever.

The flavour of PG Tips could be described very simple: It tasted like tea.

That’s it. It’s like the Platonic ideal of tea taste. It just tastes like tea. Not grasslike, not bitter, not sweet, not flowery. Just tea.

But I ran out of the stash I bought a year and a half ago, and yesterday I went to buy some more, and I got this huge sack. But then I came home and read at the back: “New PG Tips Original”!?

What!?

So I gave it a try this morning and… beurk.

I mean, it looks reasonable — it gives the water a tea-like colour. But the flavour is what you may call minimalist: It somehow makes the hot water taste essentially more like hot water.

I’m not trying to be hyperbolic here, but there’s just no flavour. It reminds me of when I had covid the first time — there’s a flavour void going on. (Hey, perhaps they can change the marketing to “Remember those halcyon days of Corona when you could stay home all day and nothing tasted of anything? PG Tips remembers”.)

Yes, I checked the back, and it’s not expired. Still, there might just be a production flaw for these big bags, so I googled:

I’ve been a PG drinker for 40+ years and these new bags are the death knoll of the brand IMO. The best description I can give them is bland/watery and uninviting. They’ve lost the brightness they used to have, its like they removed all the flavonoids and just left the tannins.

So it’s not just me. Apparently PG Tips was bought by Lipton, and then by some kind of venture capitalist, and now it tastes like nothing.

Heh:

My family loves PG Tips for an everyday, wake me up type tea, and I also enjoy it for milk teas, but we just got their latest version and it’s horrible! It has no flavor and even the color is weak! I tried using twice the tea bags and I still can’t get the strong flavor of the original.

If I’m reading the statistics right, PG Tips used to be the largest brand in the UK, but now:

I guess I’ll try the other standard brands… otherwise it’s back to drinking Japanese tea that has fishy, grassy notes. And this bag of PG Tips goes in the trash.

In conclusion: This is the worst thing that has even happened to humankind.

The Best Albums of 2012

Oh, I forgot I was doing this “best of” blog series based on which albums I’ve listened the most to per year, but I found this in my drafts, so you’re welcome, I guess.

Cat Power

Sun
Cat Power - Human Being

Deerhoof

Breakup Song
Zero Seconds Pause

Django Django

Django Django
Django Django - Hail Bop (Official Video)

Fort Romeau

Kingdoms

Leila

U&I
Leila ft. Mt. Sims - (disappointed cloud) anyway - Official video

Maria & The Mirrors

Gemini Enjoy My Life
Maria & The Mirrors - Gemini Enjoy My Life

Neneh Cherry & The Thing

The Cherry Thing
Neneh Cherry & The Thing - Accordion (Madvillain cover)

Various

Minimal Wave Tapes Volume 2
Antonym - Cinnamon Air [DO11]

Thee Oh Sees

Putrifiers II
Thee Oh Sees - Flood's New Light

Dean Blunt & Inga Copeland

Black is Beautiful
Dean Blunt & Inga Copeland - 1 (Venice Dreamway)

Janka Nabay & The Bubu Gang

En yah say
Janka Nabay & the Bubu Gang – Feba (Official Audio)

XXL

Düde

Barbara Morgenstern

Sweet Silence

Xiu Xiu

Always
007 - Xiu Xiu - Always

Tujiko Noriko + Nobukazu Takemura

East Facing Balcony
Tujiko Noriko + Takemura Nobukazu - Simple Day

Book Club 2025: The Rays Of Light That Did Not Illumine by Jandek

I’m reading a big fantasy omnibus, and as is my wont when doing that, I’m reading separate short, short books in between the novels in the omnibus. Because reading several novels in a row in an omnibus is just oddly offputting to me. (But I have no problems reading several novels from the same author in a row otherwise. Go figger.)

Hey! I should tell you my Jandek story.

So, a decade and a half ago (or perhaps even longer ago than that) we were in Rome one winter, and as usual I googled desperately for interesting music in the area. I only found two things (some larger European cities are pretty much dead as far as experimental music goes — unless you know somebody who knows somebody), and the first was Uri Caine (who played in (if I remember correctly) a university lecture hall), and the second was Jandek.

To get a ticket, we went to a clothes store — which was closed. I knocked on the door, and was let in after a while, and then told that the Jandek show was sold out. But he put me on a waiting list, and then I got a phone later that we could get tickets anyway. So we went over, and it turned out that Jandek was going to play in the basement next door. There were about 20 people in the audience, all sitting on crates and whatever — this was a very dusty, dilapidated basement filled with odds and ends.

Then Jandek arrived, sang and played, and it was great.

Such underground music scene.

Anyway, this slender book is good — the texts tend toward being kinda opaque, but they’ve got a nice flow. Things get clearer towards the end. I like it.

The Rays Of Light That Did Not Illumine (2020) by Jandek (4.04 on Goodreads)