![]() ![]() If you listen to this podcast you can find out how our evening ended. After we finished our suppers we relocated to the bar and continued our conversation. It was splendid! I suppose that is one reason why I consider this interview to be one of my favorites because it didn't end when I shut down the microphones in the studio. ![]() His event in Dayton had ended and he wondered if I would like to have dinner with him and continue our conversation? I readily agreed and hopped on my bicycle to meet him at The Winds Cafe in Yellow Springs. ![]() That evening I was surprised to receive a phone call at my home from Thomas Cahill. We both enjoyed our conversation that day. This happens most often when the guest is actually in the same studio with me. Sometimes there is simply a spark that is struck during a conversation. As I look back at the many interviews I have conducted I would have to consider this one to be among my favorites. Thomas Cahill gave a wonderful interview that day. It remained on the best-seller lists for years. Patrick's Day and since the man known as Patrick was the central figure in Cahill's history of early Ireland it seemed quite appropriate. ![]() It was around this time of year in 1996 that Thomas Cahill came through the area on a tour to publicize his book "How the Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland's Heroic Role From the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe." It was right before St. ![]()
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