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At a Breezy Time of Day - Selected Schall Interviews on Just about Everything (Hardcover)
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At a Breezy Time of Day - Selected Schall Interviews on Just about Everything (Hardcover)
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We have books that contain collected essays, verse, and humor. What
we see less often are books that contain collected interviews on
various topics. Interviews have a certain outside discipline about
them. The one interviewed responds to a question someone else asks
of him. Often the questions are unexpected, sometimes annoying.
Answers have a freshness to them. They can be more personal, frank.
The responses in At a Breezy Time of Day are occasioned when
someone writes or phones with a request for an interview. There may
be a common theme but often side questions come up. We are curious
about what someone has to say - about sports, about God, about
Plato, about education, about books, about just about anything.
Usually central questions occur. The same question can be answered
in different ways. We often have more to say on a given topic than
we do say on our first being asked about it. These interviews
appeared in various on-line and printed sources. Having them
collected in one text makes the interview form itself seem more
substantial. Interviews too often seem to be passing, ephemeral
things, but often we want to hold on to them. There is something
more existential about them. Yet there is also something more
lightsome about them also. The truth of things seems more bearable
when it is spoken, when it has a human voice. So, as the title of
this collection intimates, we begin with the very first interview
in the Garden of Eden. We touch many places and issues. The
interview always has somewhere even in its written form the touch
of the human voice. The one who interviews invites us to speak, to
tell us what we hold, why we hold it. Interviews are themselves
part of that engagement in conversation that defines our kind in
its search for a full knowledge of what is. We know that when we
have said the last word, much remains to be said. We can rejoice
both in what we know, and in what we know that we do not know. I
believe it was Socrates who, in an earlier form of interview at the
end of The Apology, alerted us to be aware of what we know and to
await the many other interviews that we hope to carry on with so
many others of our kind in the Isles of the Blessed.
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