This
is a partial report on my doings at WFC in Columbus. I only
attended Friday and part of Saturday this year. My original intent had been for longer. Unbeknownst
to me, however, cosmic forces far beyond the understanding of mere mortals
intervened. My dear Chicago Cubs made it
to the World Series! That forced an adjustment to my shedule, as the Brits say.
I
had a nice time driving down from Toledo to Columbus with Marc Tassin. This was
the longest conversation we ever had, and we both learned things about the
other and laughed a bit. I caught up briefly with Beth Vaughan, who’d already
been in Columbus for a couple of days. She’s writing her fingers to nubbins
working on SOMETHING NEW.
Friday
night I hung out at the bar. With my daughter Jamie. We watched the Cubs and
Indians play game three. We had dinner elsewhere, and then settled in to watch
baseball. Jamie doesn’t really care for baseball. She doesn’t drink alcohol,
except for an occasional glass of wine. The evening’s result? It was great! I
couldn’t have had a better time or company.
Saturday
was kind of the usual con stuff, although World Fantasy is really more of a pro
convention than many others. I met Maurice Broaddus, who has been a nice
addition to Marc’s GenCon Writers’ Symposia. I got knocked out in the art room
by a painting titled The Sanguinary Innocent by Jarrod Erik. I was
tempted to make an offer, although with a minimum bid of $1,400.00 I would have
been persona non grata upon arriving back home.
“But
just look at this. What stark beauty. What power.”
“What
the in the ever loving HELL were you thinking?”
What
I DID buy turned out to be even better, and all it cost was $15.00. While
perusing the dealer room, I noticed a cheerful fellow behind a table hawking
his new collection of short stories with some illustrations. As part of his
pitch he offered to do a custom pen and ink drawing of any beast you could
name.
“Any
beast?” sez me.
“Any
beast. What do you have in mind?”sez cheerful writer/artist.
“Well,
years ago my son came up with the concept of Der Uber Corgi. It’s a big Corgi
wearing a World War I spiked German helmet.” (The helmet is called a
pickelhaube, btw, and Der Uber Corgi’s nemesis is The Iron Ostrich. But that’s
a story for another day.)
“Heh.
Sounds cute. Big Corgi.”
“I
mean BIG, like Godzilla-sized, laying waste to the city.”
So,
I pay my $15.00 for his book, and then wander the room awhile as he works. (I
never liked people looking over my shoulder when I was building cabinets.)
I
do hear him giggle a couple of times. When I return, he’s finished the piece,
and he seems very pleased. He tells me it was a lot of fun. I take a look, and
I’m seriously stunned. It’s not what I was expecting, because it’s pretty much
exactly what I was hoping for, only even more so. I find it hard to tell him
how pleased I am, and I know my son Alex will love it.
The
writer/artist is a fellow named Jerome Stueart. (Yes, that’s the correct
spelling.) His book is titled The Angels of Our Better Beasts. And his
stories are TERRIFIC! I won’t go into any review here, but I can say that if
his drawing was the cake, his stories are the best butter crème coconut
frosting I can imagine. Alex loves coconut frosting.
I
almost didn’t go to World Fantasy this year at all because of the Cubbies. Alex
and I had watched every game of their playoff run together, and the World
Series, of course, is the epitome. How could I miss one of those games with him? Now I’m so glad I did. Even with no other
consideration, spending the evening with Jamie, and then discovering Jerome
Stueart and bringing Uber Corgi home was so, so worth it!
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