Five Questions Meme
Apr. 25th, 2010 08:40 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Ask me five questions about anything — fandom, real life, random preferences — and I'll ask you five questions in return.
Memed from lost_spook, who asked me:
- 1. Which is your favourite Doctor?
- Two. The first one I saw was Seven, and he was my favourite for
a long time; but as I've seen more of Patrick Troughton's episodes,
I've come to think Two has all the characteristics I like about
Seven, and those of Troughton's performances I've been able to
watch have been uniformly brilliant.
That said, I think they're all splendid chaps, in their various ways. - 2. What do you like best about Babylon 5?
- The Vorlons. They're one of the better attempts to create an alien that isn't just a human with a funny forehead. They're ancient and devious and don't think like us. And I love the way their speech is done: vaguely musical noises, with simultaneous translation.
- 3. When you write a mystery story, do you plot it out carefully first, or work it out along with your protagonists?
- I don't have a detailed plan. I know, as a rule, roughly how the murder (or whatever) was done, and by whom; but I let the protagonists fill in the details at their own pace. Sometimes this part does cause tweaks in what I already knew, or thought I knew.
- 4. What's your comfort reading?
- Most recently (while I was waiting to go to hospital and have my retina examined), The Loss of the Jane Vosper by Freeman Wills Crofts. Golden Age detective fiction with all the characters made of the finest cardboard.
- 5. What was your first fandom?
- My first fannish behaviour (imagining myself in the setting, making up adventures and so forth) would probably be the original Star Trek. In the sense of discussing the show with other like-minded people, I think Star Trek TNG — I recall chatting with others at school about the episode where the solution to the problem of the week was to turn the Enterprise off, then turn it back on again. Doctor Who was the one where I actually went as far as joining a society of like-minded people.