This blog has existed since October 2008, and has been written almost-daily since the 2 January 2009. It's given birth to books, it has taken your author to every corner of this beautiful city on a much more regular basis than before to explore the best London has to offer, and it has made him some truly great friends he hopes to have for the rest of his life. From this week, however, your author will be spending rather less time in the capital, and as a result it will become more difficult to add daily updates here. As such, less regular updates will continue here, and a new website Tom's Britain will also cover interesting things to see and do in other parts of Britain.
Each summer, Westminster Abbey hosts a free series of brass band concerts in College Garden, which is accessible for non-Abbey-ticket-holders via the cloisters to the rear of the Abbey. Today's concert kicks off at 12.30pm and features Regent Brass, a traditional brass band from Wembley in North West London.
Originally the King's Bench Prison, and later the Queen's Prison and the Southwark Convict Prison, a prison stood on the site of what is now the Scovell Estate in Borough from 1758 until 1880, replacing a medieval prison which had taken its name from the King's Bench court of law in which cases of defamation and bankruptcy were heard, amongst others.
It's Bastille Day on Tuesday, and to celebrate Borough Market is hosting a special French event, with food and drink, traditional waiter’s races, bi-lingual storytelling, face painting, and petanque playing.
The 41st Barnes Fair kicks off on Barnes Green this morning from 9.30am, with live music, food and drink and some three hundred stalls, plus special medieval themed special element, celebrating the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta.
Your author drank Pimm's and pretended to watch tennis until the sun set last night in the new Lewis Cubitt Square, a perhaps temporary place to be beside Central Saint Martins in the heart of one of the largest urban regeneration projects in Europe in King's Cross.
Children played in fountains, Murrays won at tennis, and everyone had a jolly nice time, whilst thirty-somethings tried to remember where they had spent hazy late nights nearby ("it was something to do with a freight yard and the clubs were called something like The Cross and The Key"). At lunchtimes, stalls serve food and in the evenings until the men’s final this Sunday, 12th July a big screen shows tennis to people lolling in deck chairs.
For more, see http://www.kingscross.co.uk/event/strawberries-screen-2015
There's supposed to be a tube strike today, and so it seems the perfect opportunity for some evangelising about cycling in London. The best thing your author has done since he arrived in London is to buy a bike. It saves time, it helps you exercise and it helps you to understand the city better. Sure, it's rather dangerous, and our medieval street pattern isn't even designed for bicycles, let alone cars, buses and cycles all vying for the same piece of tarmac, but the benefits far outweigh the negatives.
Timed to coincide with the City of London Festival, the City Beerfest returns to Guildhall Yard today for its third year, featuring beers from 15 popular breweries and live music from Galway's We Banjo 3, 'powerhouse ensemble' The Kansas Smitty’s House Band, imaginary-island-based-conceptual-music-project Malphino and Cuban-born violinist and jazz musician Omar Puente.
Ten years ago today at 9.47am,18 year old Hasib Hussain blew himself up on the number 30 bus in Tavistock Square, killing Anthony Fatayi-Williams, Jamie Gordon, Giles Hart, Marie Hartley, Miriam Hyman, Shahara Islam, Neetu Jain, Sam Ly, Shayanuja Parathasangary, Anat Rosenberg, Philip Russell, William Wise, Gladys Wundowa and himself. The senseless loss of these lives will never be forgotten.
This time last week - having bought a ticket - your author trekked all the way to the new King's Cross man-made natural swimming pond for a lunchtime swim, only to be told on arrival that there was no swimming that day after all due to poor water quality. Though a refund has not been forthcoming, and the pond website was no longer working at the time of writing, those who have managed to take a dip insist it is worth the risk.
A special interactive event as part of the Greenwich and Docklands International Festival, The Secret Princess of Severndroog sees Severndroog Castle in south east London imagined as a fairytale castle,by a theatre company.
The free Bermondsey Carnival takes place in Southwark Park today, with music, a funfair, food stalls, a rumble in the jumble jumble sale and a headline set from Deptford. New Cross' 70s rock hero Steve Harley and his band Cockney Rebel .
A miniature Waterloo Carnival takes place today, with a myths and legends theme featuring a mythical picnic at 11.30am, a carnival at 1.30pm and a musical finale at 2pm featuring Westminster legend Kate Hoey MP.
Now in its 5th year, the London Folkfest begind at the Bedford in Balham today, and continues until Sunday, offering live music across three stages and a number of genres with a special Country & Americana flavoured evening on Saturday, especially for the 4th of July.
This post has been written before, but once again the sunset over the Thames at the Cutty Sark - on Ballast Quay in Greenwich - was fantastic. The pub is a fantastic spot, in a beautiful part of town, with little traffic except the boats and swans to interrupt the slowly setting sun. The pub dates in its current form from around 1795, and once stood among industrial dockyards with ships tied up to the quay outside.
If you've ever wondered what sorts of jokes would be told at a multinational-banking-and-financial-services-corporation-sponsored comedy show in a privately-owned public square which is home to the London headquarters of Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch and the third-largest stock exchange in the world, this lunchtime is your chance to find out.
Established in 1982 on half an acre of land behind what is now the big Sainsbury's at Angel Islington, the Culpeper Community Garden is run by people from the local community, and is divided up into 65 plots for local people and groups without gardens.
For around 300 years, one family have owned 92 acres of some of the most expensive land in the country, around Marylebone High Street and Harley Street. The land owned by the Howard de Waldens isn't the biggest aristocratic estate in central London, but it is worth some £3.2bn and makes a decent profit each year. The Estate also helps to promote the area and bring people to it and for the past eleven years, they have been hosting the Marylebone Summer Fayre in June, and this year's takes place mainly this afternoon.
The twice-yearly opportunity to get visit the usually-closed buildings of Eel Pie island in Twickenham takes place this weekend and next, with the Eel Pie Island Open Studios event
A brand new beer festival begins in Hampton in Middlesex this evening, with beers, ciders, and fundraising for a number of worthy charities.
There's nothing like a book to help you relax and put things in perspective and at Hackney Central Library today you're invited to a regular book group aiming to offer you a lively discussion based around the classics and international texts.
The small packet boat pictured arriving at Calais in J.M.W.Turner's Calais Pier is based on sketches made on the artist's first ever trip abroad, as he observed a small boat in similar difficulty approaching the port of Calais in 1802.
In your author's experience there are very few restaurants in London where breakfast is completely unaffordable, and getting a reservation somewhere before 9am is almost always possible. As a result before work is a great time to explore some of the places where you otherwise might not dare, and though the Wolseley pushes price decency with a £5.75 bacon roll and a £16.50 Full English, it isn't a bad place to take breakfast, relaxing in the splendid setting of a Grade II* listed building that was once the Wolseley Motors Limited showroom,the 1920s creation of architect William Curtis Green.
For many years, your author has been taking irregular holidays in Porthmadog in north Wales, a small town with an interesting history as a port fed by the slate mines of Snowdonia. The town is known for its transport and as well as the famous Porthmadog Ships it is served by the narrow gauge Ffestiniog Railway. The railway marks 150 years of passenger services this year, and this week one of its Pullman carriages is on show at Paddington to celebrate.
The annual West End Live showcase kicked off yesterday, and continues today, offering the chance to see some of the most popular shows from West End theatres, with showcases from thirty-two different productions and plenty of other performers and exhibitors as well.