Skip to main content

MARCH 2022 Broadcast: Martina Nicolls

 



MARCH 2022


TRAVEL

The feature this month is the Palace of Versailles near Paris and the Mont-Saint-Michel in Normandy, France.

MONT-SAINT-MICHEL

Le Mont-Saint-Michel island is the second most visited tourist location outside of Paris (the first is the Versailles Palace). It is referred to as a commune tidal islet (small island) in Normandy, France, in the Bay of Mont-Saint-Michel.

MONT-SAINT-MICHEL MERCHANDISE ... AVAILABLE HERE


PALACE OF VERSAILLES

VERSAILLES MERCHANDISE ... AVAILABLE HERE


ICONIC PARIS

ICONIC PARIS MERCHANDISE ... AVAILABLE HERE


FEAST OR FAMINE

My blog site Feast or Famine has posts on book reviews, art galleries and museums, my humanitarian work, articles, and photographs.


SIMILAR BUT DIFFERENT IN THE ANIMAL KINGDOM

My Website: See information and photos on animals ... This month's feature is the jaguar. 

JAGUAR MERCHANDISE ... AVAILABLE HERE

OTHER MERCHANDISE from my PHOTOGRAPHY PORTFOLIO


A FLOWER EXPECTED EVERYWHERE

My Website: See information and photos on flowers, gardens, floral art, poetry, books ... 


SIGN OF THE TIMES

Shop Window, Paris, February 2022


CREATIVITY

Jacob Nordby's Institute for Creative Living: February 2022 Heal + Create Virtual Retreat 

Lessons learned during the Retreat: What you have created so far in your life serves as a basis to develop a new plan for creativity that encompasses all areas of your life - work and finance, community, wellness, environment, and inner self. Jacob Nordby has examples and practical exercises in his 2021 book The Creative Cure.


THE PARIS RESIDENCES OF JAMES JOYCE

My latest book The Paris Residences of James Joyce (2020) has a website with information on the book and Opal Hush blogs that aim to connect the past to the present, and discover people and places in Paris.

Opal Hush is mentioned in James Joyce's 1922 novel Ulysses. It's a drink - a quarter of a glass of claret with lemonade from a soda siphon.


THE AUTHOR

To receive broadcast updates, subscribe here: SUBSCRIBE

I am an author and an independent consultant (in peace and stabilisation, human rights, labour rights, labour market assessments, countering trafficking in persons, education, vocational education and training, health, and good governance). 

I have several websites and blog sites, such as my main webpage (http://www.martinanicolls.net), animal website (Similar But Different in the Animal Kingdom), plant website (A Flower Expected Everywhere), Paris website (The Paris Residences of James Joyce), a general blog site (Feast or Famine), and a facebook page.

Copyright © MARTINA NICOLLS, All rights reserved.

MARTINA NICOLLS
http://www.martinanicolls.net
http://martinasblogs.blogspot.com
https://www.facebook.com/Martina-Nicolls-მარტინა-ნიკოლსი-1450496988529988/timeline/


MARTINA NICOLLS

MartinaNicollsWebsite

 

Martinasblogs

Publications

Facebook

Paris Website

Animal Website

Flower Website

SUBSCRIBE TO MARTINA NICOLLS FOR NEWS AND UPDATES 

 

MARTINA NICOLLS  is an international aid and development consultant, and the author   of: The Paris Residences of James Joyce  (2020), Similar But Different in the Animal Kingdom (2017), The Shortness of Life: A Mongolian Lament (2015), Liberia’s Deadest Ends (2012), Bardot’s Comet (2011), Kashmir on a Knife-Edge (2010) and The Sudan Curse (2009).

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pir-E-Kamil - The Perfect Mentor by Umera Ahmed: book review

The Perfect Mentor pbuh  (2011) is set in Lahore and Islamabad in Pakistan. The novel commences with Imama Mubeen in medical university. She wants to be an eye specialist. Her parents have arranged for her to marry her first cousin Asjad. Salar Sikander, her neighbour, is 18 years old with an IQ of 150+ and a photographic memory. He has long hair tied in a ponytail. He imbibes alcohol, treats women disrespectfully and is generally a “weird chap” and a rude, belligerent teenager. In the past three years he has tried to commit suicide three times. He tries again. Imama and her brother, Waseem, answer the servant’s call to help Salar. They stop the bleeding from his wrist and save his life. Imama and Asjad have been engaged for three years, because she wants to finish her studies first. Imama is really delaying her marriage to Asjad because she loves Jalal Ansar. She proposes to him and he says yes. But he knows his parents won’t agree, nor will Imama’s parents. That

Flaws in the Glass, a self-portrait by Patrick White: book review

The manuscript, Flaws in the Glass (1981), is Patrick Victor Martindale White’s autobiography. White, born in 1912 in England, migrated to Sydney, Australia, when he was six months old. For three years, at the age of 20, he studied French and German literature at King’s College at the University of Cambridge in England. Throughout his life, he published 12 novels. In 1957 he won the inaugural Miles Franklin Literary Award for Voss, published in 1956. In 1961, Riders in the Chariot became a best-seller, winning the Miles Franklin Literary Award. In 1973, he was the first Australian author to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature for The Eye of the Storm, despite many critics describing his works as ‘un-Australian’ and himself as ‘Australia’s most unreadable novelist.’ In 1979, The Twyborn Affair was short-listed for the Booker Prize, but he withdrew it from the competition to give younger writers the opportunity to win the award. His autobiography, Flaws in the Glass

The Beggars' Strike by Aminata Sow Fall: book review

The Beggar’sStrike (1979 in French and 1981 in English) is set in an unstated country in West Africa in a city known only as The Capital. Undoubtedly, Senegalese author Sow Fall writes of her own experiences. It was also encapsulated in the 2000 film, Battu , directed by Cheick Oumar Sissoko from Mali. Mour Ndiaye is the Director of the Department of Public Health and Hygiene, with the opportunity of a distinguished and coveted promotion to Vice-President of the Republic. Tourism has declined and the government blames the local beggars in The Capital. Ndiaye must rid the streets of beggars, according to a decree from the Minister. Ndiaye instructs his department to carry out weekly raids. One of the raids leads to the death of lame beggar, Madiabel, who ran into an oncoming vehicle as he tried to escape, leaving two wives and eight children. Soon after, another raid resulted in the death of the old well-loved, comic beggar Papa Gorgui Diop. Enough is enou