We've been holidaying in Brittany for the past six years. I dare say we'll look back on this period as the Brittany Years. There was an elegiac feel in the air this time; partly because it was starting to feel autumnal, but also because this was probably our last family holiday, just the four of us together. I'm amazed we've sustained it this long, really. Many teenagers opt out of holidays with mum and dad after the age of 14, preferring instead to stay at home and trash the house with illicit parties that spiral out of control.

My other new thing was driving in France. Driving on the right. Shriek. The experience would have been even more alarming had the car been a left-hand drive. I can imagine myself fumbling in panic in the glove compartment for the gear stick each time I approached a junction. In fact, it wasn't too dismaying an experience as it turned out. French roads are generally pretty empty. On the whole, I prefer to be driven, so that I can stare blankly out of the window. Staring blankly out of windows is part of the writer's job description, and is not easily compatible with driving. Still, the challenge of driving on the right was there, and I rose to it. Nervously and timidly, but there we are. I hope I'm a better person for it.