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Soon I Shall Become the Norman Ornstein of Cthulhu
[info]princeofcairo
Last week, I had the great fun of talking to San Antonio Express-News reporter René Guzman about Cthulhu, as an expert source for a piece he was doing on the lighter side of Cthulhu in pop culture.

The result of our chat/interview is up now: "Cult of Cthulhu Crowns Its Icon." I assume the piece is in print somewhere in the greater San Antonio area, too.

Should you be interested further in René Guzman, check out his newsy, chatty blog Geek Speak.

Should you be interested further in the lighter side of Cthulhu in pop culture, well, you know where to go.

And speaking of Cthulhu 101, [info]billzilla wrote a fine and generous review of it for Flames Rising. I always respond with consternation when people thank me for reviewing their game, but in case Bill is more together than I (seems likely), thanks, Bill!

Oh, and Cthulhu 101 made the prestigious OgreCave Christmas Gift Guide ("A Dozen Game Gifts Under $25") for 2009, which is something else nice.

Christmas Special
[info]grrm
The end of the year is almost upon us, and the holidays are bearing down like a freight train, so it must be time for a Christmas sale.

From now until the end of the year, I'm offering special discounts on three of the hardcover books offered on the Signed Books page of my website.

The Meisha Merlin trade hardcover of TUF VOYAGING, with a cover by Michael Komarck and interior illustrations by Janet Aulisio, normally sells for $29.


The Bantam Spectra hardcover reissue of WINDHAVEN, my collaboration with Lisa Tuttle, sells for $26 on the website.


And INSIDE STRAIGHT, first volume in Tor's new Wild Cards triad, goes for $27.


You can also get all three of these books for $69.

But those are the normal prices. From now through the end of the year, as a Christmas special, I'm offering each of the hardcovers for $20, or all three for $57.

Those prices include Book Rate (Media Mail) shipping within the United States. If you would prefer Priority Mail, please add $5 for a single book, or $10 for more than one. Overseas and out-of-country shipping is more; please inquire.

And of course I'm always willing to sign and inscribe the books.

Happy holidays, and good reading.

Marvelous Miniatures
[info]grrm
Just wanted to share some more of the wonderful Ice & Fire miniatures from Dark Sword.

First, some lovely painted versions of Prince Oberyn Martell, the Red Viper of Dorne, and Ser Gregor Clegane, the Mountain That Rides, dueling for the life of Tyrion Lannister. Tom Meier did the sculpts, and Matt Verzani painted these for the Dark Sword studio collection.

Prince Oberyn:


The Mountain:


The Duel:


Tom is always so exacting about scale and size with his sculpts; I love how this pairing brings home Ser Gregor's monstrous size in such a vivid and visceral way. And of course Matt has done a wonderful job with the paint, as always.

And while Matt's been busy with his brush, Tom has been sculpting up a storm in his studio, and we have some great new greens to add to the range. These aren't in production yet, but look for them soon.

Here's Arya:


And Sansa:



Lady Catelyn:


And a personal favorite, Sansa building her snow castle at the Eyrie:


For more information and pictures, visit the Dark Sword website at http://darkswordminiatures.com/ And remember, miniatures make wonderful stocking stuffers for all the Ice & Fire fans in the family.

Printing
[info]simonjrogers
Thank you for your responses to my printing dilemma.

My goodness! You do like the full colour option. I'm afraid that momentum has taken us to two colour for this particular release, but I will endeavour to plan the next major release in full colour, ideally as a hard back. I'm planning an in-world London guide with no game mechanic content at all to supplement Book Hounds of London. Either that, or the Bookhounds itself could be full colour

I've got blisters on my fingers...
[info]muskrat_john
A column I wrote, 19 years ago, when I was a newspaper person in another life.

LENNON’S LIFE, LYRICS TOUCHED MANY LIVES

By John Kovalic
Wisconsin State Journal

About five years ago, I walked out of Paul McCartney’s “Give My Regards to Broad Street” and into the offices of the UW student newspaper, the Daily Cardinal, to type up my careful, considered review of the movie.

“Somebody,” I wrote, “shot the wrong Beatle.”

In the days that followed, as the Cardinal devoted what I’m still convinced were special issues – but may have been merely entire pages – to my hate mail, I decided to crawl underneath my desk and rethink my position. Friends told me Chicago Tribune columnist Bob Greene had become so violently incensed with my review that he stopped writing about Elvis Presely for a full five minutes to compose a column on how young people these days didn’t understand Paul McCartney.

The Bob Greene reports may have been spurious – I have yet to track down any such column – but if I ever get around to penning my autobiography (tentatively titled “I Wandered Lonely as a Clod”), I’ll probably gloss over what later came to be known as “The Broad Street Affair.”

Instead, I’ll try to focus on McCartney’s recent world tour. Specifically, on a three-song medley he performed in the middle of a block of Beatles numbers at a mobbed Soldier Field in Chicago.

I can’t even remember if he introduced the medley, yet its songs were unbearably wrenching: “Help!” “Strawberry Fields Forever,” and “Give Peace a Chance.”

Songs John Lennon wrote.

To be honest, McCartney’s versions of “Help!” and “Give Peace A Chance” didn’t strike me as anything to write home about at the time. They seemed rushed, and slightly harried. Maybe not dishonest, but not from the heart.

But the emotions I felt as he moved into the opening chords of “Strawberry Fields” were overwhelming.

Maybe it was the deferred hope diffused in “Strawberry Fields” that McCartney captured that night. Or perhaps it was simply his relative difficulty in relating to the lonely pain of “Help!” or the subdued urgency of “Give Peace a Chance” that made the middle song so powerful by comparison.

But – at that moment, during the opening chords of an abbreviated song he hadn’t even written – McCartney transformed his performance from Oldies Concert to Happening.

There seems to be a division among some Beatles fans, between Lennon supporters and McCartney apologists. It’s as if nobody can quite accept the fact that the band that produced “And Your Bird Can Sing” also put “Good Day Sunshine” on “Revolver.”

Every other radio station under the sun will be playing blocks of Lennon’s music today, on the 10th anniversary of his murder. “And Your Bird Can Sing” will undoubtedly be among them.

And at some point, there’ll be a Lennon song – it may be this or any one, it depends on how I’m feeling at the time – that gives me pause, that makes me think back to a cold day during my first year at the University of London, when I couldn’t believe the news.

At the time, I was a staunch McCartney apologist. In a sense – a few movie reviews to the contrary – I still am.

But when I heard the news, I felt cold.

Ten years ago, the BBC pulled its regularly scheduled evening broadcasts in the wake of the murder, and ran the movie “Help!” instead.

At some point today, a radio station will play a song. And I’ll start thinking about how one man can touch so many lives.

(c) 1990, Wisconsin State Journal
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Premise Threat in RPGs
[info]robin_d_laws
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The false suspense of the premise threat is largely absent from RPGs. It's the rare series that carries the implicit promise that its main characters will never die or fundamentally change their natures. If a TV writer's room runs out of ideas for its series lead, a premise threat starts to look tempting. When a player gets bored with his character, she talks to the GM and generates a new one.

Also, RPG series are typically less oriented to a tight premise than to a central activity. It’s this activity that is exempt from change, with characters rotated in and out to perform it*. As long as the D&D characters are killing things and taking their stuff, your Traveller traders kicking around space getting into trouble, or the vamps engaged in intrigue with other bloodsucking power groups, the central activity and thus the series' sense of basic unity remains intact. To convincingly threaten the premise, the players have to believe that the entire activity would come to an end, or that all characters of their type will disappear. Traveller characters might face a threat that would stop interstellar travel. A mass vampire die-off could threaten the premise of a Vampire game. A non-absurd threat that would bring all D&D activity to a halt is hard to envision. A divine blessing that turns every entity in the universe into a communal pacifist?

Because GMs often start and stop games, players may respond to a premise threat with equanimity. It might not dismay them that the fantasy city they headquarter in could irrevocably drop into a time rift. They could easily assume that the series has reached its natural end and gird themselves excitedly for the big finish. An external threat to their characters' viability could elicit a shrug and thoughts of a new character, or the justifiable feeling that authorship rights are being unfairly poached upon.

*Certain long-running ensemble shows work sort of like this. You can’t threaten the premise of Law & Order, as there will always be cops and prosecutors doing their job in New York City. ER survived for an astounding fifteen seasons, with only one leading actor in common between the starting and ending casts.


Pearls of Wisdom
[info]gbsteve
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Last Summer's Green River Trip
[info]bar_sinister

My son Crispin turned 13 last February. When I turned 13, my dad took me out on a camping weekend with several of his male friends for a sort of coming-of-age experience. We talked about what it meant to be a man, and a lot about dating and girls. It was definitely something I’ve remembered ever since.

When my own son passed that same milestone, I wanted to give him a similar experience. Around his birthday, I invited several of my friends along and we camped for a weekend in mid-Winter in the Adirondacks, in a pre-built yurt. That was pretty awesome and was very much like the camping trip I took at that age. We talked about manhood, dating, and taught Crispin how to play Texas Hold-Em, all essentials of growing up.

My dad didn’t make it out for that trip, but he had something else in mind. A six-day, 97 mile journey down the Green River in Utah. This was one of the most amazing and physically exhausting experiences of my life. Pop was 69 years old at the time (he’s now 70), and we went with my brother-in-law John and my cousin David, along with Crispin. We kept a journal on the river, each person writing in turns. After we got back, it was suggested that we have a permanent online record of our journey, which I agreed to do. Of course, it took me 6 months to get around to it. My next post will be the first entry, and I will post each entry one by one. I don’t have all the photos from the trip, so these will probably be updated after they are posted with additional pictorial evidence.

Keep watching for more! These posts will be tagged “Campy McRivertrip.” You’ll see why in the Day 1 entry.

Green River in Utah, from Ruby Ranch to the Confluence with the Colorado River.

Intrepid canoeists: Jonathan Taylor, Brennan Taylor, Crispin Taylor, John Hall, David Terry.

15 – 20 June, 2009.



The Birds
[info]robin_d_laws
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View series to date here. Updated archive soon.

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JeepForum
[info]gbsteve
I had a twitter contact from JeepForum. I thought it was about Jeepforms. It's not. It's about Jeeps. Clearly, they are confused.

This Weeks Releases: Doctor Who, 100 Sci-Fi Seeds and Barbarians of Lemuria!
[info]angusabranson
Yay! We have three new books out this week :)

Released This Week: Doctor Who: Adventures in Time and Space RPG, 100 Sci-Fi Adventures Seeds and Barbarians of Lemuria (Legendary Edition)!







How Sweet It Is
[info]grrm
And down go the Dallas Cowboys, for a season sweep.

Only a SuperBowl tastes sweeter than a victory over the hated Cowboys. Once again, as in the playoff game at Dallas two years ago, all the talking heads picked Dallas, and once again all the so-called experts were wrong. If anyone had told me yesterday that Tony Romo would complete 41 passes and Eli Manning would complete 11, I would have figured the game for a Dallas blowout... but if anything, the final score should have been more lopsided in favor of the G-Men. The last Cowboys TD was a gimme in garbage time, and earlier in the game our Steve Smith let a sure TD catch go skipping off his hands. The keys to the victory were a pair of amazing plays, a catch-and-run by Brandon Jacobs, and a punt return for a TD by Domenick Hixon. You'll see them on the highlight reels this evening.

Will the G-Men make the playoffs? Well, they have a chance now... but the road ahead still looks pretty damn rough, with the Iggles next week and the Vikings at season's end. But for this one week, at least, life is magical and full of joy.

Pretty amazing week in the NFL all round. Evil Little Bill and his P-men were upset as well, the Saints had a close call and an amazing win (has Dan Snyder fired that kicker yet?), and the Raiders knocked off the Steelers with Bruce Gradkowski doing his best Kenny Stabler imitation. Things are getting really interesting.

And Dallas faces the Chargers next week. Maybe I won't need to kill Pat after all.

(P.S. Flozell Adams is a thug, and may be the dirtiest player in the NFL).
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Pearls of Wisdom
[info]gbsteve
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Pearls of Wisdom
[info]gbsteve
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Thursday Night Lights
[info]grrm
Life is magical and full of... uh... a tiny teeny bit of hope?

The Jets beat the Bills of Buffalo last night in Toronto, which was good. Defense looked awesome, especially Darrell Revis, who completely shut down that loudmouth TO. Offense, not so much. And things got even worse on the offensive side of the ball when Mark Sanchez dove for a first down and hurt his OTHER knee, the one not already in a brace. Really, he's taking this "following in the footsteps of Joe Namath" thing too far. Kellen Clemens looked awful in relief. If Sanchez is seriously hurt, Gang Green is done.

And if not... well, there's still a slim chance we could make the playoffs. All we'd need to do is sweep our last four games, including the undefeated Colts and red-hot Bengals. That's going to happen, sure. Uh-huh.

But Rex does have the defense playing lights out, so that's something.
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Big Printing Tizzy
[info]simonjrogers
I am in a big printing tizzy. This will show a little of how pricing can work, and I will throw it out to the floor for suggestions.

I've had two-colour, one-colour and full colour quotes for Armitage Files. Now, I'm going to be putting up the files themselves for download for purchasers as PDFs, and they will be in colour. The whole book will be about 120 pages. For 120 page book, I could charge between about $22 and $30. I get about 32.8% of the sale price through distribution, so that's between $7.21 and $9.84 margin to pay for printing and production, excluding shipping to Aldo.

Then I have to worry about how many copies I might sell. Stunning has reached 1250+, but it was the first supplement. Shadows has sold 750 so far, but is still going OK. Arkham and Rough are off to a slightly slower start - about 500 each in the first couple of months.

My difficulty is that I would really like to go for two colour (it would have to be 1250 off), but the sensible option would be one colour 1000 off. I could even go for the full bloody glory of Sarah's actual Armitage Files artwork and go for the Ennie-award seeking full colour option - 1250 off.

Quotes are (after a lot of back and forth)
1/1 (monochrome)
1000 units $3.81
1250 units $3.36

2/2 (two colour)
1000 4.93
1250 4.29

4/4 (four colour)
1000 5.63
1250 4.86

These prices, incidentally, aren't as good as I might get elsewhere even by POD, but it's very good quality.

So, what do you think?

How many and what type of book should I print?
Monochrome 1000 off
Monochrome 1250 off
Two colour 1250 off
Full colour 1250 off
  
pollcode.com free polls

Why A Serious Man Is the Rosetta Stone Of Coen Brothers Films
[info]robin_d_laws
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Because it contains the trifecta of Coen brothers thematic elements...



...and addresses them in the text as well as in the subtext.


T-Shirts
[info]angusabranson
Really quite like some of these un-pc t-shirts :p

Linky Linky



Recycle more
[info]gbsteve
Recycle Now is a website that tells you just what your local council will pick up from your house, as well as where you can recycle other things locally, such as the plastic bags, broken glass or batteries that many councils don't take.

Pearls of Wisdom
[info]gbsteve
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