Witchfinder Later, Interview Now

I shall be writing the chapters of Witchfinder once I have had enough caffeine.  (Yes, the beep beep beep IS the tanker truck backing up to my house.)

Meanwhile, if you can’t live without me, R D Meyer interviewed me this week — though honestly I was JUST coming up from the death flu, so if I sound odd(er) than normal, it’s not RD’s fault.

14 thoughts on “Witchfinder Later, Interview Now

  1. Interesting.

    (And so, as I have had a particularly nice dose of Hoyt to ponder, I am free to go to Chapel Hill with The Daughter. :-))

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  2. Nice interview. Are you willing to spill the beans on which book that is selling very well indeed from a traditional publisher?

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        1. Lots of the midwest could use the rain. Chicago had 2 hours of drizzle today, the first rain we had in weeks and weeks. Most of the lawns have gone brown and dormant already while the trees have been shedding a lot of leaves…

          While I appreciate the need for water here why did it have to happen right over lunch when I was supposed to fire up the charcoal grill at work instead of after 1pm like it was forecast. 8-P

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          1. I lucked out yesterday and was able to make it to my car before the rain came to where I work in Cincinnati, but the storm front came with gale force winds, and knocked out power to the Whole Foods, which my niece’s husband manages. I sort of understand why they don’t keep emergency generators on hand for this sort of thing (not needed often enough to justify the expense, except that they had to throw away quite a bit of frozen and refrigerated foods), but I can’t make myself believe that it’s a good idea.

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            1. Around here most of the grocery store chains keep some extra refridgerated/freezer trailers at the distribution warehouse for such emergancies. Drive them up within an hour or two of the outage while the store’s fridges are still cold, load up from the store, then unload when the power is back on.

              You all must have had to many outages for them to cover them all at once.

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              1. Same around here for the refrigerated trailers — but I suspect the bulk of the focus at the moment is on West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland and D.C. There are a LOT of folk in humid 100-degree heat without electricalicity desperately turning large downed trees into firewood..

                All those chain saws running must be making one heck of a contribution to AGW — perhaps the EPA should limit their use, especially in the D.C. area?

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