While I hate for this to become nothing but a meme depository — and while I have done this one before — here are Five Questions from Eric:
- How and when did you first encounter Monty Python, and what was it that “clicked” with you?
I actually answered this back in 2003 in an issue of Completely Different (PDF), the Penn State Monty Python Society newsletter. It was around that time that I first discovered this here meme. What I wrote was:
The Lady of the Lake, her arm clad in purest shimmering samite, held aloft Excali—oh, sorry, wrong story. Well, like a lot of people, I discovered Monty Python in the strangest of places — junior high school. I had friends who quoted this movie of which I’d never heard, Monty Python and the Holy Grail. I listened, I investigated, and, lo and behold, it turned out to actually be funny! So I rented the movies, and I bought the albums, I read some of the books, but it wasn’t until I came to Penn State that I actually saw an episode of the TV show. I discovered the Python Society quite by accident at the Fall Involvement Fair. The table was empty, but there was a sign-up sheet and a weird poster informing passersby that this was the organization the University was afraid to let you join. (Or something like that.) Naturally, I signed up. The rest, as they say, is history. Not very interesting history, but there you have that all the same.
Which still seems about right.
- What is your favorite geeky activity?
While writing and reading can both qualify as geeky, especially when you toss in my penchant for science-fiction stories, people don’t exactly look at you weirdly when you try to describe them. Capping on the other hand… I’ve probably been capping for just shy of a decade now, and it shows no sign of getting old. (Even if the jokes themselves do.) - What are the best and worst things about working in the publishing field?
This is my first official job in the field, and the first job I got after living in Pennsylvania on my own for five years. So I doubt I have enough perspective to accurately answer that one. The things that sometimes annoy me about this job don’t really bear repeating, and I don’t know that they’d apply across the board in other publishing jobs. I like books, though. And I like being in a job that gets me around them. - If you had the choice of being remembered as a novelist, a poet, or a critic (but only one of those), which would it be and why?
I’m not a very good critic — as my almost-never-updated book log and now-almost-half-a-year-out-of-date film review list can attest. And while I’ve written some poems I’ve enjoyed, I don’t think I’ll ever think of myself as a poet. Can I be remembered as a novelist without actually writing a novel? I’d like to be remembered as, among other things, a writer. - Coleman Francis, Ed Wood and Ray Dennis Steckler: Compare, contrast, or vilify.
There’s a PUMAT cap in there, I just know it! I’d actually never heard of Steckler before (although I have seen The Incredibly Strange Creatures…). Of the two that I know, I’d much rather watch Ed Wood’s films. They’re just as awful, but they’re enthusiastically awful. Francis’ films, on the other hand, are just a wee bit depressing. Although he did inspire a toe-tapping musical…
If you’d like to play along on your own weblog, and you’re looking for questions, feel free to say so in the comments and I’ll see what I can do.