Softness
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
I read one of your interviews on LJ (Karen Miller, 2007). In it you mentioned a 6 week study tour of Africa. What was that like? Have you written more about that trip somewhere? Do you still have any of those picture slides you took? You also mentioned hitchhiking in Europe! What countries? I'd love to hear more if you ever feel like talking about these adventures. ^^ -Kalli
Lois McMaster Bujold
The Africa trip was in 1971, and the Europe one in 1965, so both over 50 years ago. While I still remember more about them than any of my high school classes, I don't think I have the endurance to type them out just now.
I do still have all the slides. No slide projector or other method of displaying them, however. (Note to all the techie readers about to jump in with advice, Yes, I know they could be converted to digital. No, I'm not on for that project just now either, thanks.)
The hitch-hiking was with my 21-year-old brother (I was 15.) 1965 was likely just on the cusp before such a thing came to be considered too dangerous. Youth hostels and his valiant attempt to tour Europe on $5 a day. We did England, Scotland, and a bit of Wales. Switzerland and north Italy were in there somewhere, and passenger trains, a novelty to my Midwestern experience. (My brother was a big train and model railroad buff. To this day I still find public mass transportation alien and daunting.) Three weeks of this, switched to trains in France, where it wasn't so easy to thumb it, then he dumped me with my parents in Paris, once we'd finally found their hotel, and he went north to Scandinavia and we went south by car to Germany and Italy.
This was back in the days when a trip overseas was considered a once-in-a-lifetime experience, not a weekend jaunt. I was, of course, totally ignorant of the histories much of what I was seeing, and no internet to fill in, hah, but less so by the end. 1965 trip is also memorable for being where I first found The Fellowship of the Ring, on a used-book rack in Rome. I would say, "Left by some hippie," but hippies weren't invented yet.
Ta, L.
I do still have all the slides. No slide projector or other method of displaying them, however. (Note to all the techie readers about to jump in with advice, Yes, I know they could be converted to digital. No, I'm not on for that project just now either, thanks.)
The hitch-hiking was with my 21-year-old brother (I was 15.) 1965 was likely just on the cusp before such a thing came to be considered too dangerous. Youth hostels and his valiant attempt to tour Europe on $5 a day. We did England, Scotland, and a bit of Wales. Switzerland and north Italy were in there somewhere, and passenger trains, a novelty to my Midwestern experience. (My brother was a big train and model railroad buff. To this day I still find public mass transportation alien and daunting.) Three weeks of this, switched to trains in France, where it wasn't so easy to thumb it, then he dumped me with my parents in Paris, once we'd finally found their hotel, and he went north to Scandinavia and we went south by car to Germany and Italy.
This was back in the days when a trip overseas was considered a once-in-a-lifetime experience, not a weekend jaunt. I was, of course, totally ignorant of the histories much of what I was seeing, and no internet to fill in, hah, but less so by the end. 1965 trip is also memorable for being where I first found The Fellowship of the Ring, on a used-book rack in Rome. I would say, "Left by some hippie," but hippies weren't invented yet.
Ta, L.
More Answered Questions
Anne
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
...Ok, exactly how long have you been waiting to spring those perspective shifts in Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen on us? Two days after reading, I'm still counting up all the stuff that categorically changed in that book. I'm thinking some of those have been sitting around as little hints and implications for more than a decade. You, madame, are a literary magician of the first water.
(hide spoiler)]
A Goodreads user
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
Hello, Lois, I've started to get to know your work. I really liked your books?
Catherine Nemeth
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
In Wot5G as the Gods are real but not material, how much are theology/religious beliefs from divine inspiration vs man-made? Could someone create a new theology (aside from Quadrene)? Start a weird sex cult? Claim to be a priest from a distant land with different gods that can intervene directly/cure disease/bestow good fortune,etc (for donations)? Would they eventually get stopped by a real divine/saint/sorcerer/god?
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