Bill Bryson's latest work, piled high! |
Bill Bryson, Bill Bryson, Bill Bryson, Bill Bryson.
The man himself |
I have also listened to many of his published works, and because he is the reader of his audio books, I've listened to him for hundreds of hours. His voice is as familiar to me as my own brother's. He's like a friend whose humor has seen me through the years, both the high times and the rough patches. I bought In a Sunburned Country, A Walk in the Woods, and Neither Here Nor There on tape. I listened to all of them so many times that the tape wore through in several places. Then I replaced them with CD versions and kept on listening.
Today I drove to Arlington, MA, with my devoted and long-suffering husband to meet Bill Bryson, who was signing books at the New England Independent Booksellers Association (NEIBA) office in Arlington, MA. One of my sales reps from Random House, Ann Kingman, arranged for Bryson to sign books for her accounts. So I got to take the day off work and go for a Sunday drive on a beautiful day with my favorite person in the world to meet one of my favorite writers in the world. The phrase "walking on sunshine" comes to mind.
Bryson was in the region promoting his new book, At Home: A Short History of Private Life, which I've already blogged about twice. You can read the posts here and here. It's marvelous and funny and erudite and everything else that I like about his writing.
May I confess something? Before I moved from Mississippi to New England to live with the man who became my husband, I wrote up an extensive pro and con list. My husband knows that one of the "cons" was that I would no longer be able to watch episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer as they aired because he didn't have access to the UPN network. But what he doesn't know is that one of the "pros" is that I would be more likely to have the chance to meet Bill Bryson, who lived in New Hampshire at the time. So you could say that Mr. Bryson is one of the reasons I moved to New England. I'm just not revealing exactly what position he had on my "pro" list.
Mr. Bryson was also kind enough to sign and inscribe my personal collection of his works, or at least those books still holding together without tape. I thought it might be unseemly (though a compliment of the highest order) to bring him my copy of In a Sunburned Country that was in two pieces. Or my copy of A Walk in the Woods, which one of my dogs enjoyed as much as I did.
Bill Bryson, Bill Bryson, Bill Bryson, Bill Bryson.
L-R: The man I moved to New England for, the other man I moved to New England for, and me. |
Superb! I understand your enthusiam! I loved A Walk in the Woods. I've wanted to walk the Apalachian Trail ever since.
ReplyDeleteThat's wonderful that you got to meet him! I saw him speak at the Boston Book Festival and it was fantastic. I've read most of his books although I haven't listened to his audio books yet. Will need to rectify.
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