Archive for the 'Q&A' Category

The Infamous Proust Questionnaire – Joshua Henkin

Welcome to the Reincarnationist Blog’s series of interviews using the infamous Proust Questionnaire. Today’s subject is Joshua Henkin

henkin

THE QUESTIONS:

Title of your latest book as of Sept 1, 2007: Matrimony (pub date:

October 2, 2007)

Do you believe — even a little bit that reincarnation is possible?

I kind of believe anything is possible (just about) and as someone

who was raised in an observant Jewish home (I attended Jewish day

school from kindergarten through 12th grade and went to an Orthodox

synagogue and a Conservative summer camp), I’m certainly suggestible

when it comes to the supernatural. That said, in a list of my own

supernatural beliefs, reincarnation isn’t at the top.

Have you ever read anything books the subject that made an impression

on you?

Most of my reading about reincarnation came when I was nine or ten at

the supermarket checkout line, where the tabloids promised that there

was irrefutable evidence to support reincarnation. I have to say, I

was terrified. I was convinced that I would end up as a cow or a

cockroach. Worse, I believed this would mean I would be separated

from my family, who I understood would not also be cows or

cockroaches, and at that point in my life the idea of separation from

my family, though probably subconsciously very appealing, was,

consciously, terrifying.

What is your most marked characteristic that you believe could be a

hold over from a past life?

The kind word for it would be perseverance. Those less kindly

inclined would call it stubbornness or pigheadedness. I can’t imagine

not having been this way for lifetimes.

What is your principle defect that you believe might be inherited

from a previous incarnation?

See above question.

Which of your favorite heroes do you think you actually could have

been and why?

I don’t know if they’re heroes, but whoever was a previous era’s

version of Oprah, that would have been me. A novelist has to be

interested in people, which is just an elevated way of saying that

we’re all big gossips. I can listen endlessly to strangers talk to

each other. I’ll miss my subway stop sometimes, and it’s not even

that the conversation is so interesting–I just can’t help myself.

I’ve been known to flip through strangers’ yearbooks. Most people

don’t want to look at their *own* yearbooks, but not me…

What three people from history would you like to have over to dinner

for a discussion about reincarnation?

If it’s going to be about reincarnation, why not the biggies? I’ll

have Moses, Jesus, and Mohammad over for dinner. Potluck.

What do you think happens when we die?

I have no idea, but a combination of childhood teachings and hope die

hard. In short, I hope when I die I go somewhere, and I hope it’s

somewhere good.

When you come back next time, who would you like to be?

Probably my three-year-old daughter. I’d like to know what it’s like

to be her–to hear all this befuddling talk from the adults around

her. I wonder what she makes of it.

book

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The Infamous Proust Questionnaire – David Morrell

Welcome to the Reincarnationist Blog’s series of interviews using the infamous Proust Questionnaire. Today’s subject is David Morrell

SCAVENGER (Vanguard Press, 2007)

THE QUESTIONS:

Title of your latest book as of Sept 1, 2007:

SCAVENGER (Vanguard Press, 2007)

Do you believe — even a little bit that reincarnation is possible?:

Yes.

Have you ever read anything books the subject that made an impression on you?:

OLD SOULS: THE SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE FOR PAST LIVES by Tom Shrodder (Simon & Schuster, 1999)

What is your most marked characteristic that you believe could be a hold over from a past life?

An obsessive interest in the past

What is your principle defect that you believe might be inherited from a previous incarnation?

A tendency to over-analyze past mistakes.

Which of your favorite heroes do you think you actually could have been and why?

My father who was a British airman and died on D-Day.

What three people from history would you like to have over to dinner for a discussion about reincarnation?

Plato, Benjamin Franklin, Winston Churchill

What do you think happens when we die?

Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared. We turn into speeding lights.

“Sometimes, the light slows, and we achieve mass again, perhaps becoming a new person with memories of the past. Wordsworth called it ‘trailing clouds of glory’.”

When you come back next time, who would you like to be?

Stand-up comedian

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The Infamous Proust Questionnaire – Douglas Clegg

Welcome to the Reincarnationist Blog’s series of interviews using the infamous Proust Questionnaire. Today’s subject is Douglas Clegg.

Vanity Fair is uses this simple and yet revealing questionnaire to interview celebrity subjects.

THE QUESTIONS:

Title of your latest book as of Sept 1, 2007:

 

The Queen of Wolves, Book Three of The Vampyricon

 

Do you believe — even a little bit that reincarnation is possible?

 

Yes, I believe it is among the possibilities of life. Sometimes I like the idea, and sometimes I think, “Oh, all of this all over again? I don’t know.”

 

Have you ever read anything about the subject that made an impression on you?

 

No. Any impression of reincarnation has been based on observation of nature itself, but I did read a lot about reincarnation while studying comparative religions in college — and I’ve forgotten none of it.

 

What is your most marked characteristic that you believe could be a hold over from a past life?

 

Probably a great flaw, but if I mention it here I might have to send anyone who knows about it into the next incarnation.

 

What is your principle defect that you believe might be inherited from a previous incarnation?

 

See above.

 

Which of your favorite heroes do you think you actually could have been and why?

 

I wish I could say I was a reincarnation of a hero, but I suspect if reincarnation exists, my past incarnations have been more likely just ordinary people in the situations life put them in. Or else, very bad people. After all, what if we’re all here now because we’ve been reincarnated from very bad people, and this is where bad people go? Just a cheery thought!

 

What three people from history would you like to have over to dinner for a discussion about reincarnation?

 

These are three people I’d love to have met and listened to about anything: Alan Watts, Isak Dinesen, and Joseph Campbell. I’m not sure if Isak Dinesen would want to discuss reincarnation, but I’d like her at the dinner table anytime. Of course, if there is reincarnation, maybe I actually can have them over for dinner soon.

 

What do you think happens when we die?

 

This is the big question, and I don’t have answers yet because I haven’t been there and no one who’s been there has yet told me about it. But I hope we get to continue.

 

When you come back next time, who would you like to be?

 

I’d like to be a writer again — it’s a good life, and I wouldn’t mind having it twice. In fact, the thought of reincarnation as a possibility makes the shortness of life not seem so bad. On the other hand, if I can’t be a writer, I wouldn’t mind being a dolphin so I could explore more of the ocean — I doubt I’ll be able to do much of that in this life.

 

queen

We would love to hear your responses to these questions. Please feel free to copy and paste the Questionnaire with your answers into a Comment for this post.

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