desperance: (Default)
[personal profile] desperance
So actually I had this really good day away. Took a train to Peterborough, which is the exact right length of journey to read Dislocations from cover to cover (yes, including my own story, thanks: I had to give a reading from it later, and besides, I haven't read it through since submission, so I was curious to know how it worked on the page); and then another on to Huntingdon, where m'friend Helen picked me up and took me to the house she shares with her husband, m'friend'n'publisher Ian Whates. Which house already housed Ian Watson (Ian! Watson!), so there was talking'n'such, 'n'wine'n'such, until we went back into Peterborough for pub-time before the gig. [livejournal.com profile] fjm and [livejournal.com profile] chilperic met us there, along with [livejournal.com profile] fjm's trainer and other people whose names and/or LJ handles I no longer remember, 'cos I'm crap like that; and then we went to the library for gigging.

This was the launch for 'Dislocations', and [livejournal.com profile] fastfwd was there to read from her story - joy! - along with me and Amanda Hemingway and Andy West (neither of whom have LJs, as far as I'm aware), and Ian Watson (Ian! Watson!) read from Ken McLeod's, and fun was had by all.

Then we repaired with a small-but-gorgeous audience to the L P Hartley Room - definitely another country - to eat foods and drink wines and be drunken, which is always good; and I sold a few copies of Phantoms at the Phil, which is always good too. And then there was a drive to an Indian buffet in the middle of absolutely nowhere, which was a bit bizarre; and we were the only people in and it was late but they let us eat regardless, which is always good also. And then back to Ian's and whisky and more talking, and so to bed.

And all morning much the same, without the whisky: coffee and croissants and talk, until Ian Watson (Ian! Watson!) gave me a lift to the train, and I came home.

(And in case anyone wonders about the exclamation marks, I should just point out again how impressable I am; and I have been reading Ian! Watson! since I was a teen, since he published a wonderful story called "On Cooking the First Hero in Spring", at which point I fell entirely in love with him because who could not? - and these days he talks to me, and gives me lifts, and I am sooo impressed with myself...)

(no subject)

Date: 2007-08-14 07:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] handworn.livejournal.com
the L P Hartley Room - definitely another country

And did they do things differently there?

!

Date: 2007-08-14 08:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jeremy-m.livejournal.com
> Ian Watson (Ian! Watson!)

When I was a child I used to walk to the library in the next village for books in yellow Gollancz covers, and lord Watson of the exclamation marks was one of the sacred writers. He had a special place for producing "The Embedding", SF about language for goodness sake, so I naturally assumed he lived in a palace far away and spent all day being rich and famous, like all authors.

Imagine my delight, just forty years later, to find him at an SF con so small that he was the one serving the beer. He was even willing to talk to me about his books, though claiming not to remember writing the ones from Abercarn library, just like a mortal person. And the beer was cheap too.

Give him some punctuation marks from me.

Re: !

Date: 2007-08-14 08:52 pm (UTC)
julesjones: (Default)
From: [personal profile] julesjones
I am strangely comforted to know that I'm not the only one who has a vision of yellow Gollancz covers as a Pavlovian reaction to the name of Ian Watson...

Re: !

Date: 2007-08-14 09:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com
Oh, not at all the only one. Pavlov's poodles hunt in packs.

Is it just me, or was life SF better in yellow jackets?

Re: !

Date: 2007-08-14 10:08 pm (UTC)
julesjones: (Default)
From: [personal profile] julesjones
I think it was better. Of course, I may just be showing my age.

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