[personal profile] tamaranth
Last night's interview at the BSFA went quite well, I think. [livejournal.com profile] fastfwd told me I was Cute, and waxed lyrical about my Exotic Genes. She, in turn, was Charismatic, and Conversational, and Cheerful: all good attributes in an interviewee. Less structured than some I've done, but it was fun and interesting, and nobody started snoring.

(I have remembered one of the points I wanted to expand upon: that sense of the past, and the shock of Roman ruins for someone new-come to Europe. I'm repeatedly surprised by the way that so many people in this country take ancient history for granted. My cleaner used to live in a house with a Roman road at the bottom of the garden: her son dug up Roman coins there. She couldn't care less.)

Also excellent news re the guests for the BSFA/SFF AGM on May 6th -- Bruce Sterling and Stephen Baxter.

The evening was proof, though, that after-work excursions aren't that practical any more. Between 5pm and 11pm I spent very nearly 4 hours travelling: and I'm not at my best this morning. It's easier when timing isn't crucial, or when the destination is close to a Thameslink station.

(Frustratingly, there are engineering works affecting trains from BH to London every weekend for ages.)

Memo to self: discover civilised local life.

Date: Thursday, January 26th, 2006 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] msilverstar
All of it, casual Roman ruins, Saxon ditches, motte-and-baily mounds, medieval castles (ruined and relatively whole), Renaissance shops in the town centre, seventeenth century walls in people's houses... It's amazing to us who live in places where there's not much standing over 150 years old (e.g. California). It's one of the main reasons I love travelling in Europe. Tangible history.

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