SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
Members' Chat
>
When and where in the world are you?
date
newest »


I’m also in Arizona (Flagstaff) and the time zone thing can be a pain. I work for an agency that has offices across the country and trying to organize conference calls across multiple time zones is surprisingly confusing when I have to explain that we’re on MST all the time.
Before moving to Arizona, I spent 8 years in various corners of California (Eastern Sierra, Shasta-Cascades and Tahoe) and I’m from New England originally.

Also, for those who worked in the Williston Basin oil fields, you always had to ask Montana time or North Dakota time to determine when you'd meet or call someone and even then some parts of ND were in the same time zone as Montana

I am originally from Argentina, moved here for work 5 years ago.

We vacationed in Missoula and Kalispell this summer, and they are my new dream places. Like, I'm feeling somewhat desperate to move to Montana.

Plumas County, California (super rural in the mountains)
Bend, Oregon
Las Vegas, New Mexico (way better than the other Vegas)
Amherst, Massachusetts
Brooklyn, New York
Madison, Wisconsin, and
Wooster, Ohio.
I now live in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which is a great city except that it decided to plant itself on the wrong coast.



Timmins is in Ontario, not Newfoundland :)


I support that move! It's been more than a decade since I lived there full-time, but Missoula is still one of my favorite places, and one of the places I'll always consider home.

Most of my life was spent in the industrial part of Wales - the south east - but just over a year ago I moved to beautiful West Wales which is a dream!
Best of both countryside and coast. What I like most about this area is that everywhere you go it feels like you've stepped back 50 years in time. Such an inspiration for my writing!
We often walk the coast path, which is a 15-20 minute drive away.

I've lived for the most part in our capital city Dhaka, but moved here in 2015 to study at the university (I'm graduating this year). I was born in another city, Mymensingh. From there we moved to Dhaka in 2002/2003.

I've lived for the most part in our capital city Dhaka, but moved here in 2015 to study at the university (I'm graduating this ..."
Finally, another from/living in Asia ;p

Monica, no, I'm not a ranger. I'm an Explosive Ordnance Disposal technician. We work with the rangers and Special Forces, but we're our own thing. I do admit to being a storyteller. Life gives the best inspiration.

So interesting reading how other people live

I have also lived in Massachusetts, northern California, New Jersey (while working in New York City), and Austin, Texas.


Yeah, I can't wait for it either. This was such an attempt in uselessness.

I was born in the country of the Witcher (Poland), but have lived in Denmark for the past 8 years. I live and work in the charming city of H.C. Andersen called Odense.
And I'm facing the same challenges of changing time zone (GMT+1 in winter, +2 in summer).

I've lived for the most part in our capital city Dhaka, but moved here in 2015 to study at the university (I'm gr..."
Nice to see someone from Asia too!

That's about an hour from Washington DC and Baltimore, MD, and three hours from Allison up in Philly. This is in the Eastern time zone (GMT-4 / BST-5).
I was born at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in a country that doesn't exist anymore (West Germany). But it turns out that Europe isn't all that memorable because I don't remember any of it (we came back to the States when I was two).
We lived a few other places before Maryland. And since I graduated from High School all my family has moved away from here. I kind of got deposited here like a boulder left behind when the glaciers melted. I have a brother a couple hours away in Southern Maryland. My dad lives in Virginia. And my older brother lives in Alaska, S. Dakota, and Texas depending on the time of year (it's a hard life when you have $$!).
I'd rather live in the climate of Southern California, but prefer the cost of living of the East coast. Maybe one day I'll retire closer to the shore. Like maybe Delaware?


Should change my name to Nomad...

Gee, I thought that I had previously made an entrance on this thread, but it seems I was negligent up to now, so…
I live in Boucherville, a nice and quiet town on the South Shore of Montreal, Canada (GMT - 5). My family moved a lot around the Province of Québec after I was born in the Beauce area, to finally settle in Boucherville when I was still a teenager. I enlisted in the Canadian Armed Forces at the age of 18, then served in a number of places, including overseas (total of 5.5 years overseas: 2.5 years in Germany's Black Forest; two years in Lebanon during the Civil War there and the Israeli Invasion of 1972; six months in Cyprus and six months in Bosnia). I added to the exotic touch to my life by marrying a girl from the Dominican Republic and I am still married, with two grown sons. I retired in 2017 and now live on my pensions. I speak French, English and a limited Spanish. I once spoke a limited German but I am now completely rusted out.
I live in Boucherville, a nice and quiet town on the South Shore of Montreal, Canada (GMT - 5). My family moved a lot around the Province of Québec after I was born in the Beauce area, to finally settle in Boucherville when I was still a teenager. I enlisted in the Canadian Armed Forces at the age of 18, then served in a number of places, including overseas (total of 5.5 years overseas: 2.5 years in Germany's Black Forest; two years in Lebanon during the Civil War there and the Israeli Invasion of 1972; six months in Cyprus and six months in Bosnia). I added to the exotic touch to my life by marrying a girl from the Dominican Republic and I am still married, with two grown sons. I retired in 2017 and now live on my pensions. I speak French, English and a limited Spanish. I once spoke a limited German but I am now completely rusted out.

The Pendle Witch Trials are fascinating!



[I notice that there are at least a couple more Santa Feans in this thread. Maybe we should get together and start a book club!]
Before I came to Santa Fe I lived in Maryland for about twenty years (that's where my kids were born), most of that in a funky little town on the banks of the Susquehanna called Port Deposit.
Previous to that I'd been living in New Jersey / attending college and then working in New York City. Most of my school years were spent in suburban Pennsylvania (Philadelphia area), but I was born in Wisconsin and lived there till the age of seven, so my accent is still largely Midwestern.

I went to college in Colorado. We used to say "Where the air is rare!"


I visited Regensberg a few years ago for a conference, it's a lovely city! I still have dreams about a particular plate of pork knuckle and sauerkraut.
I'm from Belfast, Northern Ireland (where we do not have pork knuckles and sauerkraut). :) Born, raised, went to university and now working all within a 20 mile radius. Which seems a bit mad compared to a lot of others here, a very well travelled bunch!

I genuinely hesitate to recommend this book, because I have never managed to get more than a couple of chapters through it, as it is very much "of its time" (being the early 1950s), but have you come across Mist Over Pendle by Robert Neill?

I was born there! Lived there 'til 2001 when I moved out to California.
Currently living in Ventura County (GMT -8), which is nestled on the southern CA coastline between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara. There isn't much to do here unless you like to eat, drink, soak in the sun, or sit in traffic on your way to somewhere more interesting. :D There are a couple of Navy bases here, one of which has a major HQ of the Seabees, and a Seabees museum accessible to the public.
We plan to retire in St. Louis in a few years. It's gonna be a change after mostly getting used to this place...
Seconding that this is a great thread, and I'm enjoying reading where everybody's lived/living.

oh, I wonder if there would be German restaurants in Belfast? I am not crazy about German food, but I like their big range of bread and sausage types and love their potato salad. (that I don't manage to copy no matter what I do) :-)

Big fan of road trips so I do know a bit about Arizona, Montana, California, etc. Am working on exploring the country east of the mighty Mississippi. Big fan of small towns, can't handle cities anymore (and never was a fan). Am def. open to meeting up w/ folks.



I was born in the UK and have lived in Canada for the majority of my life. I live in Toronto which has been in state of growth for a while now, with the highest number of construction cranes in North America. It's also supposedly the most multicultural city in the world, so the food is pretty awesome and one of the reasons I've stayed put.

Which high school did you go to? I graduated from GHS in 2003. Still in Florida, but living on the Space Coast now. 10 minutes from the beach, and being able to see rocket launches from my front yard is a pretty great perk!

Us Queenslanders also don't do daylight savings (smart people), because we have more hours of sunlight than we know what to do with (the most in the country).
I've also lived in the English Lake District (just for a summer, to earn enough to travel in Europe), which was lovely, but cool, London (crazy-cold over autumn-winter-early spring, but very interesting as a young adult, and so much history), and French Polynesia. I also lived in Portland, Oregon, where someone else on this thread is from/lived - when I was very young, for a couple of years. Nice autumn colours. It was the 80s, so my memories of it are all tinged by that :D.



I genuinely hesitate to recommend this book, because I have never managed to get more than a couple of chapters through it, as it is very muc..."
I didn't even notice this until now. Gah, I'm so bad keeping up with threads! I'll check this out! Thank you :)

you're probably ahead of me. I lived in 18 different houses by the time I was 18. Hmmm, the last three were 1yr, 3yrs and 4.5yrs, so maybe we're tied? I was an Air Force brat.
I was born in NW Iowa, USA. Moved to Madison, Wisconsin when I was 2. I spent a lot of summers in Indiana as a teenager, which is another state that doesn’t do daylight savings time. I’ve traveled (but not lived) all over the US (missing only 4 States: Maine, Florida, Alaska and Hawaii). I moved to Germany when I was 22 and lived there a total of 20 years with 2 years in London, 3 years in France (always moving back to Germany) and now England again. Not planning on going back to Germany but that’s what we said the last few times!
My husband is from Italy. My family all lives in Missoula, Montana, so when I visit family I go there (but not home to Madison anymore 😢).
I love hearing where everyone is from and has lived!