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Sunday, June 24, 2012

There's always one...





This is an enquiry we received this morning. 


Hi There,

im trying to match a book to some wallpaper we have!!Could you please tell me what the first sentance is on page 51 to check this is the correct addition.


Many thanks


Here's the book. I tell you what would be polite.  If she sent me a sample of the wallpaper ;)  



Tuesday, May 29, 2012

It's not really work - is it?

The general thing I have found  about working from home is that everybody else in the world thinks that you don't actually work at all. True my journey from work takes approximately 4 seconds and I get to take my lunch break  in my garden when it's sunny -  so a couple of times a year - haha!. But I actually start working from the second I wake up - "My name is Sara Williams- I have a Blackberry and  an e-mail habit." Sometimes if TW can't get the internet to play then I start working before I am properly awake. "Did you try turning it off at the wall leaving it a couple of minutes and turning it on again?" 

Generally though, I find  that my friends and family think it's OK to interrupt me working, on a whim, because they need coffee, a chat, a shoulder to cry on (though I'm not actually the most sympathetic person in the world - I'm more the  get-on-with- it type), somebody to look after their kids, somebody to pick up their kids from school, somebody to come out and rescue them when they've run out of petrol, etc etc you get the idea.  I even once had a friend ask me to collect her child from school and take her to hospital  where I waited three hours for X Rays and Doctors reports (hockey accident - nothing broken) because she couldn't leave work.  Oh the irony!  Agreed all this makes me either a mug (likely), a great friend (true) or a martyr (on occasion).  But when somebody turns up on your doorstep saying 'Have you got five minutes?" it's not as easy to say NO as you think it might be.  

Today has been a day of more interruptions than usual.  So far I've had - The Jehovah's Witnesses (2 nice ladies);  a Viking delivery (three rolls of bubble wrap and 6 boxes of padded envelopes); my Mum and her friend who came to take plants and rocks from the garden as I'm having the pond filled in; the postman with a parcel from Canada; and a couple of times KW (daughter) who has needed advice. I have managed to list online  NO books - not a single one.   I have processed the orders (what there were of them) but that's about it.  Actually it's quite sunny out.  I might go and sit in the garden ;)


Friday, April 20, 2012

What are the chances?

A lady in Australia enquired about a book yesterday called Daisy in the Field by Elizabeth Wetherell and asked if we also  had a copy of Wetherell's earlier book Daisy which  sadly we did not. 


This morning I have been cataloguing some children's books and what was the first book I found in the box - but Daisy.  So both books are now on their way to Oz.  Some things are just meant to be!