Transcript
Question: Do you consider yourself an expatriate?Lyall: Well, unfortunately, I do. You know, I’ve been there for now 13 years. But I think my sensibility is still much more American. I don’t think I’m English, but, in some ways, maybe I’m not that American either. I’ve lived away for so long. And you kind of, as a newspaper reporter, you’re also always on the outside of things. So, you’re never really part of any culture, I don’t think, and, if you were, it’ll be hard to have the distance you need to write effectively about it. But, I guess, I’d be considered an expatriate. Sure, I’ve been away for so long. Question: Will you one day return to America?Lyall: I think I’d come back. I love New York, and I feel like I fit in here better than I do in England. But we’ve got two kids and they’re kind of English kids now, and so we’ll wait and see, you know. If they want to go to college here, it may be a good time to come back, or who knows, you know? It’s so easy to get back and forth between the two cities now.
Sarah Lyall on the Expatriate Life
Time and distance have changed but not erased the American in Sarah Lyall.
December 15, 2008 | In History
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