As I spend an hour on the tube every day getting to and from work (zone 4 to zone 1 and back again .... for my zonally obsessed friends!), I use the two 30-minute portions of undeground space and time as well as possible.
Most days I just get out a book and celebrate the opportunity to read in peace. When I get home it's bath time for Ben, eating together, reading him a story and then collapsing! So the tube journey really is my only chance to read.
The temptation is to pick up one of the free papers The London Paper, London Lite, or Metro - but they're all awful and to be honest, there's only so much I need to know about Amy Winehouse, Britney and all the other celebrity disaster cases.
This month I've enjoyed two very different books... firstly, "The Damned United" by David Peace. It's a fictional account of the time when Brian Clough was manager of Leeds United in the 70s. It's much more than a trite football story and I highly recommend it.
A few days ago I finished Naomi Klein's "The Shock Doctrine" and I'm still absorbing and digesting it. As a journalist, she has a wonderful way of linking history and economics in Chile, Argentina, China, Bolivia, Mexico, South Africa, Poland, Russia, the UK, Israel and Lebanon before leading us to Iraq, Tsunami hit Asia and New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Her analysis focuses on free market shock policies and Milton Friedman's Chicago School of economics and leaves you in no doubt of the harm that has been caused in every corner of the world. Give it a go!
The last word has to be... how lucky I am to have this special time on the underground every day. If I lived close to the school then I would never have the time or space to read!
Stuart Rubenstein
Principal
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