 She has a wonderful sense for detail. She still has written the best critical piece on Edmund Spencer. And if you ask anyone about, you know, a new popular celebrity, who is the most likely person in the world to have something interesting to say? Well, that's probably Camille. Camille was a huge influence on me in the early 1990s. I read her book, Sexual Personae, and I saw here was a new model for how an academic can write for the general public. And that actually changed everything I was doing in my career. The notion of combining real insight with people actually caring about the book and really a desire to carry a message to people that I find highly infectious and it certainly had an impact on me. She's writing a book on the early history of American Indians and how this ties in with reviews on paganism and modern culture and Catholicism and many other things. That that would be her next project was to me a surprise. But when I saw it surprised me, it made me realize there's something about her I don't understand and now I'm starting to understand it and since I'm learning something, that makes me happy. A lot of her views on cinema, an area where she knows a great deal but actually hasn't written that much. A lot about non-western cultures, non-western religions, her best Harold Bloom story, who are the thinkers she admires. What does she now think of Susan Sontag, Joan Didion, Gloria Steinem and many other figures from when she is growing up. She is feisty, she's a fighter, she never gives up and she has this voraciousness for learning and curiosity that's very hard to top.