Volume 17, No. 4 
October 2013

 
 


Front Page

 
Select one of the previous 65 issues.

 


 
Index 1997-2013

 
TJ Interactive: Translation Journal Blog

 
  Translator Profiles
How I Learned the Alphabet—and a Few Other Things Along the Way
by Kenneth Kronenberg
 
Jane Maier, Candidate for ATA's Board of Directors
by Marion Rhodes

 
  The Profession
The Bottom Line
by Fire Ant and Worker Bee
 
Driving the Bus both Ways
by Danilo Nogueira and Kelli Semolini

 
  From the Editor
Time to Change the Guard
by Gabe Bokor

 
  Translation Nuts & Bolts
Translation Workflow
by Paula Gordon

 
  Interpreting
Humor in Conferences
by Luis D. González and Glenda M. Mejias

 
  Advertising Translation
The challenges of translation of tourist e-text
by Vasyl Stefanyk

 
Translators Around the World
Remembering Sarajevo
by Midhat Ridjanović

 
Translators and the Computer
Social Investments
by Jost Zetzsche
  Caught in the Web
Web Surfing for Fun and Profit
by Cathy Flick, Ph.D.
 
Translators’ On-Line Resources
by Gabe Bokor
 
Translators’ Best Websites
by Gabe Bokor

 
  Translators' Tools
Translators’ Emporium

 
Call for Papers and Editorial Policies
  Translation Journal
Translator Profile
 
 

Tall Man with a Dream
by Danilo Nogueira and Kelli Semolini

The first thing I noticed was how tall he was. People in our generation—and I am only a short few years younger than Gabe — are seldom that tall. Then I noticed his friendly smile: he seemed genuinely happy to meet his Brazilian colleagues for dinner that night in São Paulo.

After the usual amenities, we started making small talk around the dinner table, which was the main purpose of the meeting—and that is when I noticed how good his spoken Portuguese was. I knew he had lived in Brazil for several years, long enough to gather a degree in chemical engineering and an MBA. But I also knew he had lived in about half a dozen countries before moving to Brazil (and later to the USA) and spoke several other languages. Polyglots often have strong accents and if Gabe had one, he hid it very well. He spoke very slowly, picking his words carefully, but his Portuguese was perfect. As the dinner went on, he seemed to gather momentum, encouraged by a beer or two, and started to crack jokes as if he had been born and lived his whole life in this country.

Why was I there? Gabe used to return to Brazil every so often and we had organized a small informal dinner party for him. “We” means a few members from trad-prt, a mailing list for translators with a foot in Portuguese where Gabe was a star with his encyclopedic knowledge of engineering terms and his huge will to help.

I was also very active in the list and that is why Gabe one day emailed me an invitation to write an article for the TJ, soon after the first number was out. A great honor, of course. However, to tell the truth, I was frightened both because I would have to write in English and because I did not feel I was in the same league as the people who had written for the first issue.

But all went well and I enjoyed a standing invitation and wrote another 60+ articles, almost a third of them with Kelli Semolini, who became my partner in 2008.

The TJ was Gabe’s dream. Not the only one, for sure.

He dreamed of a free publication where translators could exchange knowledge and he knew the Web was the place for the endeavor. In those years, there were few publications on translation and all of them were very expensive and somewhat irregular. I paid a small fortune for a subscription to one and, after a few months, received a 32-page booklet with a few musings on literary translation from European academics. Very disappointing, to tell you the truth.

The TJ was different: Every three months, Gabe sent out an all-points bulletin to mailing lists that there was a new and lively edition out; an issue that we could access from our homes at no cost. No missed editions, nothing ever lost in the library, everything on-line and searchable--a revolution, really.

However, it took me some me some time to appreciate the full power and outreach of the TJ. On the strength of my articles, I was invited to speak at two ATA conferences, where I got my two biggest clients. Later on, I was invited to speak twice in Argentina, once in Portugal and then in France. All of that because every quarter, the TJ published something I had written.

In 2008, I began a partnership with Kelli Semolini, a young and talented colleague, and asked Gabe if he would accept articles by both of us. Gabe welcomed her onboard.

Now that Gabe is passing the baton to Karen Hodgson it is my pleasure to compliment him on the achievement and to thank him for allowing me to be part of his dream, which in time also became my dream. May it become Karen’s dream too.

Danilo Nogueira

As for me, well, I only met Gabe once, very briefly, in 2010. I was also enchanted by his lack of foreign accent when speaking Portuguese. His height, however, wasn’t as shocking for me as it was for Danilo: not only I am much younger and used to tall people, but also my own grandfather was over six feet tall.

I started contributing to Danilo’s articles in the Translation Journal soon after we decided to work together. It wasn’t part of our first agreement on what I would and would not do, but it seemed fun and the best way to start writing articles. After a little while, I started to realize it was not a walk in the park, though.

Danilo had already written so many articles that finding a new topic would drive both of us crazy every three months. Sometimes an idea would come to one of us at the end of the last minute, and we had to rely on Gabe’s patience and forgiveness when we missed a deadline. Never did he complain.

It has been a challenge and a pleasure to write for the Translation Journal. I hope to keep doing it for many years to come.

Kelli Semolini