Jeremy Vine
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
She said, yeah, we don't need them anymore.
She'd thrown out all the kids' drawings.
She'd thrown out the kids' drawings.
I know that's your thing to just say, none of this, we throw it all away.
But what do we do with other books?
Well, I certainly would be in favour of that.
I do have an ambition, which is that when I stop doing what I'm doing, I want to be able to ride around on a bicycle with one of those boxes on the front with about 100 poetry books in.
And if you're an older person, you'd pay me five pence to read you a poem and you could order the poem and I'd come round and read it to you and that would be it.
It's just going to be a small, something that's a transaction, but not in any way that involves a lot of money.
I probably would be.
Just make me a cup of tea and I'll read you any poem.
This is hard.
Okay, well, listen, in the end, the gimlet, if it was passed on to somebody who had a need for a gimlet, I'd feel that would be honouring my dad.
I have to keep the tattoo template because that's so emotional for me.
No, I think that this is the work she did before it was on my arm.
And as for the book, we'll have to just sell that.
I would say it's probably the front lounge where I have my drum kit.
I didn't mention it.
Well, the drum kit is one of those electric ones, sadly, so it doesn't make any noise.
But yeah, I think there, because that's also where we kind of all gather when we're doing something together as a family.