Here are the things a California girl notices immediately upon her arrival in Maine:
· I just spent an hour and a half on a small commuter jet alongside a large (250+) man. We were both at pains to remain frozen in place throughout the flight, so as to minimize the awkwardness of brushing up against each other in any way. Thank God for books. And ipods.
· There is snow on the ground when I get off the plane. I know this because you don’t disembark from commuter jets directly into the terminal; you have to walk down the stairs and across the tarmac, which sounds very Grace Kelley-Old Hollywood, until you realize that it’s not.
· When you get a rental car in
· Moose crossing signs. In
· The highway toll to drive from
· There seem to be a great many country music stations in
· There is a very scary public service ad on tv in
· I did use the ice/snow scraper. It snowed between 6 inches and a foot on the last night I was in
I arrived on this first journey in order to give the job talk that got me the one-year appointment. When the Search Chair picked me up to take me to breakfast, I immediately became aware of what winter does to your poor car on the East Coast. I was remotely conscious of this before, but seeing entire parking lots filled with vehicles that have basically been trashed across their lower half—by snow, by sludge, by the salt they pour on the roads to keep them from icing—it definitely becomes abundantly clear. This actually made me relieved that my car is already dented on both sides; then I won’t be destroying a flawless machine but simply adding to the “character” of the one I already have. :)
So I’m dressed in classic job talk attire: the full suit. Black pencil skirt, black jacket, red camisole, black pointy-toe (d’orsay, for those in the know) heels. And we walk into a classic New England breakfast joint, a very simple rectangular shack, filled with classic New Englanders: old wrinkled men in suspenders and trucker hats, women in what look to be hand-knitted sweaters (no, I’m not judging—I’m actually wearing a hand-knitted scarf, although I didn’t make it and I don’t think that makes me a member of the club anyway, judging from everyone’s reactions). Because everyone stops and stares at me. I feel not so much like a person from “out of town” (as the Search Chair turns and explains to me) as a green, scaly-skinned alien who has just landed her spacecraft in the parking lot and descended upon said breakfast joint for the gawking pleasure of the Maine masses. It is a very self-conscious, “my God I’m over-dressed for this situation” sort of moment.
But breakfast is delicious, the thinnest strips of bacon I’ve ever seen, which is how I like them. The whole shebang with eggs and great toast and coffee all comes in at under $5. Coming from
And I’m thoroughly impressed by the people I actually meet (not the ones who stare at me). There is a bartender at the Grill Room in

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