Well, I've packed up my business cards, my zoot suit, my spare eyeballs, and my extra skin in case the skin I'm wearing starts turning green early. So I'm as ready for MidSouthCon as I can possibly be.
As promised, I'll be blogging about the Con, and posting pictures. If I spot you at the Con with your Kindle you'll be immortalized in medium-resolution pixel fame on my blog, right above a snappy caption. Show me one of my books on your Kindle, and I'll bump you up to a hi-res image and shower you with praise and as many of those little packages of crackers restaurants put on tables as I have in my pockets at the time.
Yeah, baby, that's how I roll.
I'm really looking forward to the Art Show, which I think I neglected to mention before. There will be an entire room devoted to SF and fantasy artists and their works, and I saw some amazing items there last year. Sadly, security in the room was competent, and I didn't manage to leave with any art, but this year I'm bringing money, just in case.
And of course I'd be remiss if I didn't notice people in costumes.
Do I wear a costume? No. Mainly because my usual workaday appearance is cartoonish enough. I'm a middle-aged white dude with greying hair and what is kindly referred to among smaller folk as 'a few extra pounds.' Sticking orange horns on my head or wrapping myself in a cape isn't going to fool even the most myoptic of observers that I'm anything but a bookish IT guy who refuses to act his age.
I do like the costumes, though. It adds to the fun, looking up and realizing you're standing between a towering Klingon complete with filed incisors and a pair of slave Princess Leias. And while some of the costumes are last-minute affairs worn just for grins, quite a few people devote considerable time and effort to their rigs. Who doesn't enjoy a free art show?
The news people will drift around, of course, spend a few minutes laughing up their sleeves at us, get a brief clip of Storm Troopers mugging for the camera. And in most cases media coverage doesn't go any deeper than that; after all, they're just looking for a 25-second short to stick between News and Sports.
But there's a lot going on, behind the elves and the aliens. An industry is rewarding its fans for their support, and giving the writers and the artists and the editors and the publishers a peek behind the curtain.
It's great fun. Hope to see you there!
As promised, I'll be blogging about the Con, and posting pictures. If I spot you at the Con with your Kindle you'll be immortalized in medium-resolution pixel fame on my blog, right above a snappy caption. Show me one of my books on your Kindle, and I'll bump you up to a hi-res image and shower you with praise and as many of those little packages of crackers restaurants put on tables as I have in my pockets at the time.
Yeah, baby, that's how I roll.
I'm really looking forward to the Art Show, which I think I neglected to mention before. There will be an entire room devoted to SF and fantasy artists and their works, and I saw some amazing items there last year. Sadly, security in the room was competent, and I didn't manage to leave with any art, but this year I'm bringing money, just in case.
And of course I'd be remiss if I didn't notice people in costumes.
Do I wear a costume? No. Mainly because my usual workaday appearance is cartoonish enough. I'm a middle-aged white dude with greying hair and what is kindly referred to among smaller folk as 'a few extra pounds.' Sticking orange horns on my head or wrapping myself in a cape isn't going to fool even the most myoptic of observers that I'm anything but a bookish IT guy who refuses to act his age.
I do like the costumes, though. It adds to the fun, looking up and realizing you're standing between a towering Klingon complete with filed incisors and a pair of slave Princess Leias. And while some of the costumes are last-minute affairs worn just for grins, quite a few people devote considerable time and effort to their rigs. Who doesn't enjoy a free art show?
The news people will drift around, of course, spend a few minutes laughing up their sleeves at us, get a brief clip of Storm Troopers mugging for the camera. And in most cases media coverage doesn't go any deeper than that; after all, they're just looking for a 25-second short to stick between News and Sports.
But there's a lot going on, behind the elves and the aliens. An industry is rewarding its fans for their support, and giving the writers and the artists and the editors and the publishers a peek behind the curtain.
It's great fun. Hope to see you there!
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