Spectator competition winners: the hell of a foreign holiday – The Spectator Australia

Posted: March 9, 2021 at 1:39 pm

In Competition No. 3188, a challenge designed to make us all feel better about the looming prospect of another enforced staycation, you were invited to submit a postcard from a friend on holiday abroad that makes you relieved you arent there.

Whenever I find myself dreaming of a trip to see the Northern Lights, I console myself with Northern Dark, Geoff Dyers hilarious account of the crushing disappointment of his pilgrimage to the Svalbard Archipelago (only on the return journey do the stars of the show, those swirling geysers of psychedelic green, make an appearance but on the opposite side of the aircraft from which Dyer and his wife are sitting).

I enjoyed Paul Freemans account of guillemot and periwinkle stew atop Halls Ledge, Rockall, and Brian Murdochs valiant attempt to look on the bright side of hotel quarantine: the view from the window is a restfully empty car-park, so no crashing waves to keep us awake all night. Honourable mentions also go to John Plowman, Alan Millard, G.M. Southgate, P.M. Davidson and James Jackson. The winners, printed below, are rewarded with 30 each.

Vive la diffrence! In the Footsteps of Emile Zola certainly is a welcome change from the showiness and monotonous constant sunshine of the Riviera. This is the real, authentic France. Yesterday we trekked the iconic beetroot fields, the disused coal mines, limmense horizon plat described in Germinal and slept in the eerie stillness of the battlefield of Sedan immortalised in La Dbcle so evocative in the drizzle. Tomorrow its the steam engines personified in La Bte Humaine and a lecture on Zolas use of naturalisme. The locals are an inspiring bunch, too: not for them the superficial bonhomie you find in the South. No, these are the salt of the earth, a gritty breed fashioned by the landscape and ever-changing weather, as honest as Zolas symbolic beetroot and turnips that we are treated to in our roadside packed lunches. Next year Im not missing the Solzhenitsyn tour! Youve GOT to comeDavid Silverman

A postcard! How quaint! I hear you cry. Somethings kicked off in town so the ruling party, sensibly in my view, muzzled the internet. There goes our email! Still, the guys in Security will post this (I hope!) when theyre not patrolling the hotel fencing. Not even a virus could get past them and their guns! No chance of seeing the temples, alas, or anywhere else but were making our own entertainment (no TV thats the news blackout). A German guest has us line-dancing every afternoon (no exceptions!) and is planning our own in-house Eurovision Song Contest. Do you remember that Graham Greene novel where characters have cockroach races before killing them? Its the latest craze and we compare scores over dinner. Clive cheats, of course; he says everyone does. The hotel library (bookshelf, actually) has all the Dan Brown and Jeffrey Archer novels; masses to reread! D.A. Prince

Darlings, its wonderfully authentic here and Carpathia has us by heart and by throat as they say locally Our host, the Count, is charming and very old-school and wont take a paying-guest leu from us he says that our presence is nourishment enough isnt that sweet?! Malcolm is as accident-prone as ever and, so far, has had a fight with an inanimate suit of armour, found a Bucovina cobra (very common, apparently) in his docksiders and fallen (he says he was pushed!) into an oubliette. But hes off shooting Transylvanian Nocturnal Woodcock tonight with the Counts retainers (very rough-hewn) and so the Count and I dine deux. Hes very dishy. Id send you a picture but he doesnt photograph well, or at all, actually, and theres no signal anyway.The visitors book is remarkably empty. Ill set that to rights first thing in the morningNick Syrett

Hi all,Wish you were here in Mar a Lago? Because thats the idea. The name, Donald says, is Red Indian for absolutely fantastic and thats no lie. Its an incredibly exclusive Club utilising prime Florida real estate; you couldnt possibly afford membership. Donald has beautiful weather flown in constantly on its own breeze. Not that exclusivity means the resort isnt diverse; I golf with billionaires, multi-billionaires and more types of corporate tax lawyer than youd think legal while the wife this ones named Brandi spends whole days at the spa with her Personal Beautifier who promises that, with the application of the right snake oils, she need never reach 30. The Trumps are in residence Donald is such a perfectionist, still smarting at his second presidential victory while Melania selects frocks for the courtroom and everything is Trump-branded, from shampoos and bathrobes to the more cosmopolitan domestic staff.Adrian Fry

What a relief to take a rest from English froideur! Weve been having some stiff upper gins on the terrace overlooking the public beach, 100% jolly, revelling in the revels of this keep-your-hair-down island. The roads simply heave with happiness, and do you know, scooters are free these days, you just hop on and off where you find them. What a blessed r. to follow ones inner gourmet, too there are streets crammed like Christmas with every cuisine you have ever heard of, and a few besides. Were trying Korea-Mex tonight, although Holly says she might go for a quick Brazilian. In the siesta, or is it fiesta, no thats a car haha, we have been taking turns on Spotty-fi, scoring each others playlists. Des has never heard of Leapy Lee OR Baha Men! Really! Tabitha won last nights screaming competition. All so blissful, batteries re-charging!!!! Agadooo to yooooo xxxx Bill Greenwell

You are invited to submit a Shakespearean soliloquy reflecting on the news that the Bard has been cancelled by some US academics. Please email entries of up to 16 lines to lucy@spectator.co.uk by midday on 17 March.

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Spectator competition winners: the hell of a foreign holiday - The Spectator Australia

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