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These are some of the things C. Flynt has been up to, some of our personal lives, some reviews of things we've read, some stuff we've learned.

The blogs are organized by date.

Comments will appear when we've had time to check them. Apology for the inconvenience, but it's a way to keep phishers and spammers off the page.

This weekend was an SF convention in Cleveland. It's the first time I've attended this con.

I had a good time. This convention had very active tracks for Costumers, Gamers and Writers. They don't have any filking, or movies, or even late night parties. I ended up going to bed before midnight each night, unlike my usual habit of being up til 2 or 3.

Despite this, I spent a lot of time chatting with folks and meeting new folks. Since this convention isn't part of my usual routine, I didn't know many of the attendees. But a couple folks I knew when I worked outside of Akron in 1986 came to the convention and found me to say "Hi. " It was cool to chat with folks I hadn't seen in almost 40 years.

I played a game called "New York Pizza Delivery" with the game's creator. It's a fun game, and I bought a copy for my monthly board-gaming group to try.

It's a little silly, but has a well balanced set of events, extra-powers, and things to work with.

I also talked with him about how he developed the game (he has a local board-gaming group that was happy to play-test and critique), how he financed it (a kick-starter), and how he produced it (he used to work for a toy company, so he had contacts with medium-run production facilities).

The gaming community has a subculture very much like the literary and music subcultures. I wonder how many creative subcultures there are out there?

Before I moved to Ann Arbor, I owned an offset press and one of local print-shops would throw some small-jobs at me. One of the things I used to print was a Punk Rock fanzine. I wasn't in to Punk Rock (still not into it), but I learned a bunch because I had to reformat the articles so often. I can understand things like Sing-Out and other folk music magazine. Modern folk music was big in intellectual circles like Greenwich Village and Berkeley.

But punk is like, anti-intellectual. But there were amateur magazines with serious critiques of the music, the serious practitioners and the poseurs.

Back to Concoction, I was on a couple panels and listened to a few more. I did my presentations on psycholinguistics and putting songs and poetry into your work to very small audiences. I didn't outnumber the audience, but it was close. The people who came were very complimentary.

This weekend was the first test-run for my custom-built wooden book racks.

They worked!

Now I just need my novel to put into them.

According to Amazon, it will be available on March 21'st.

Buy from Amazon

Or From Mythmart: