It's a terrific convention.
My first Eastercon was Seacon in Brighton in 1984 -- a huge and wonderful affair. I was 23, wide-eyed and delighted by the convention. Bumptious, gawky, ransacking the dealer's room for Lionel Fanthorpe books for Ghastly Beyond Belief, occasionally mistaken for Clive Barker (why?) and starting to suspect that I might have found my tribe. And now, 24 years later, I'm some strange old-timery creature, at an Eastercon that's the biggest since, er, Seacon in 1984, and , despite the worries that friends have expressed to me about the greying of fandom, there seem to be a lot of people here the age I was at my first Eastercon or younger, an amazing amount of enthusiasm, and a lot of people who are having their first convention, and who may even now be suspecting that they might have found their tribe.
Altogether, a good thing.
Lots of old friends, and some new friends -- both China Mieville and Charles Stross are Guests of Honour as well, and I've known Charles for 20 years. (China for less than that.) I first signed in Fan Guest of Honour Rog Peyton's bookshop with Kim Newman in 1985 for "Ghastly Beyond Belief"... I keep running into people who I sort of recognise. Then I mentally subtract 25 pounds, make their hair dark and realise who they are.
Did an enjoyable, even if none of us were quite awake yet, panel on mythology in the morning, a wonderful panel on Fantastic London in the afternoon. Ate lunch with Patrick Nielsen Hayden, dinner with the astonishingly nice Paul Cornell -- who I am definitely supporting for a Hugo, at least until Steven Moffat comes through with the promised ice-cream, at which point I might waver. But until then it's Cornell all the way. We spent dinner in full Doctor Who nerd mode. It was much too much fun -- and I got to tell him an obscure Dr Who fact that he didn't know. Possibly one that not even Steven Manfred knows. Holly said we were very cute, and she enjoyed the conversation except possibly when we got onto the early stuff. Also somewhere in there was a lot of signing.
I met my Romanian publishers and was given Romanian copies of my books, and promised to think about coming to Romania...
Lots of fun things tomorrow -- I want to do a bit of a reading during my Guest of Honour time, because the only reading I'm down for is one for kids (a Wolves in the Walls reading) but I have to decide just what I want to read.
Mitch Benn plays at the convention tomorrow night. He just sent me a link to his latest video. It's a happy birthday song of a political nature. But the tune's nice and catchy...
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By: Neil Gaiman,
on 3/22/2008
Blog: Neil Gaiman (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: the odd way that people I've known for 24 years have of getting older, paul cornell, Mitch Benn, eastercon, Hugo Awards, Add a tag
By: Sally Murphy,
on 8/20/2007
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mem fox, jackie french, margaret wild, twelve books, classic books, australian books, libby gleeson, geoff Havel, Add a tag
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Blog: Neil Gaiman (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: the odd way that people I've known for 24 years have of getting older, paul cornell, Mitch Benn, eastercon, Hugo Awards, Add a tag
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Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mem fox, jackie french, margaret wild, twelve books, classic books, australian books, libby gleeson, geoff Havel, Add a tag
Still thinking about my list of twelve books every kid should read (see post below). All day there’s been a list of my favourite children’s books scrolling through my head. I haven’t narrowed it to a list of twelve yet, but I’m getting closer. In the picture book category, I’d love to include Ca-a-r Ca-a-a-a-r by Geoff Havel, because it’s the book I most often recommend to people. It is simply
0 Comments on Twelve Books Every Child Should Read Part 2 as of 8/20/2007 7:24:00 AM
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