
Feb 20, 2009


Wilkie Collins English Novelist Giclee Print
Buy at AllPosters.com
I am somewhat reassured after writing to Seth Godin and getting a reply from him and seeing his and Megan Casey’s posts in the Squidoo forum saying that they are looking into the worst abuses of the system and are definitely cracking down on plagiarism.
Squidoo is a great resource for writers who don’t want to run their own website or find that it is very difficult to get an audience for a small independent site. I really want it to succeed and to maintain the high standards of the best lenses and their writers.
To prove my commitment, I’ve published my latest lens. It’s not going to be a blockbuster because it’s about 19th century writer Wilkie Collins, most famous for The Moonstone and The Woman in White. Some people credit him with being the inventor of the detective novel but that accolade probably belongs to Edgar Allen Poe who wrote the Mystery of the Rue Morgue almost 30 years earlier.
I wish my interests were more popular or that I could get interested in popular topics. Oh well! I’ll just continue writing about things that interest me and hope a few other people like them too.

Jan 29, 2009
The Quilt Museum and Gallery opened on 7th June, 2008, in the medieval St Anthony’s Hall, adding another unique attraction to York’s list of museums and collections.
The Quilt Museum is now the headquarters of The Quilters’ Guild of the British Isles and its world-famous Heritage Collection of 600 quilts which includes the earliest known signed and dated patchwork, from 1718. There is also quilted clothing, tools and equipment on display.
Additionally, special exhibitions of textiles from home and abroad will be shown in the museum.
When it opened, Janice Gunner, former President of The Quilters Guild, said: “We are all thrilled that the move into our new headquarters is about to become a reality, and with it the opportunity to share with the wider world the traditions and aspirations of this wonderful craft. St Anthony’s is a fabulous location, rich in history: a wholly fitting home for our own Collection, and a focus for the exciting and innovative work going on within contemporary quiltmaking today.”
The first exhibition of 2009 at the Museum started on January 20th and continues through to April 18th. It celebrates the use of cloth through the Quilter’s Guild Heritage collection in ‘Warp, Weft and the Printer’s Block’, and through the work of contemporary textile artist Cefyn Burgess in a Ruthin Crafts Centre Touring Exhibition entitled ‘Migration’.
Find out more about the historic city of York.