rolanni: (agatha&clank)
[personal profile] rolanni

It’s raining here at the Confusion Factory, which it has been doing the last day or so. Very different from Reno, where I waked every morning in a room outfitted with Serious Sun-blocking curtains, to my first thought, “My, it’s dim! I wonder if it’s raining.”

Which brings me to the realization that, though I’ve written somewhat of the travails which afflicted our most recent journies, I haven’t written of WorldCon itself.

…which was lovely. Verily, the most relaxed and delightful WorldCon I’ve attended as a pro in years. We were lightly but respectfully scheduled, and had more time to catch up with people and Just Chat than I’ve had since I was SFWA ExecDir and it was part of my job to talk, at least, to SFWA members.

So, our con started — well, on the train, actually, when we met up with Jo Walton. The Lake Shore Limited, as reported elsewhere in this journal, was five hours late to Chicago; a theme that continued with the California Zephyr.

To digress for a moment, while it was unfortunate that the train was, at the end, six+ hours late (though on the return trip, I was to learn that this was a mere bagatelle), it was fortunate in that, for the very first time in numerous train crossings of Our Great Country(tm), I saw the Salt Lake Desert, which the Zephyr typically crosses at night, and I’m very grateful for that.

So, anyhow, being no stranger to trains running rather less-epically late, we usually plan on getting into far-flung places the day before the event starts. (We didn’t do this for last Chicago WorldCon, which was, after all, only an overnight trip. Our first event was at noon, the train was scheduled in at 8:45 — plenty of time to get to the hotel, shower, put on con clothes and get the heck down to the panel. See the train be three hours late. See Sharon and Steve throw the baggage into the hotel room and run over to the second tower to make the start of the panel.)

For the Reno trip, we made sure we arrived on Tuesday. But! The train gets into Reno at 8:30 in the morning. Even if it was late, we reasoned, we’d be in time for lunch. And so we arranged to meet Di Francis (Diana Pharaoh Francis) and her family for dinner at 6 p.m.

A date for which we were almost late.

When the train did eventually find Reno, we found Myles and Nancy O’Reilly waiting to whisk us to the Atlantis, while Jo entered into the capable care of Mem Morman for transport to the Peppermill.

Check-in was a little bit of a zoo — I don’t remember why at this point — and Shaii, on the desk, upgraded our room, to which we repaired, to unpack and shower and change.

We took a taxi to the Peppermill, located Di and her family patiently waiting, had a good visit and an…eclectic dinner at the Island Buffet. We wandered back to the Atlantis eventually, and, restless with too much ice tea (Man, I drank more ice tea on this trip than I have since I was a kid in Baltimore), walked around the place, as is our habit, locating Points of Interest.

I know some folks were disturbed by the fact that WorldCon was attached to a casino — that, in fact, the con hotels were casinos. I thought it was…interesting, and not as completely disorienting as it apparently was for others. Note that I speak here of the Atlantis; the Peppermill was a Whole Nother Story.

Anyhow, Steve and I pretty quickly found our path to the convention center, and patterned the casino floor so we had the various restaurants located.

Wednesday, after locating the Friends of Liad Fan Table, with Shawna and Angie already in attendance, I abandoned Steve and took a taxi to the Nevada Museum of Art, which is a wonderful little museum that you should all visit, if you’re ever in Reno. I went specifically for the mummy display, but the facility was small enough that I was able to tour the whole thing, eat lunch and get back to the Atlantis in time to join Steve for our presentation at the Sierra View Library, across the street from the convention center.

We arrived in time to see Steve Gould finish up his presentation, which was fun; then we read from Ghost Ship, answered questions, and said Hi to Carol Berg, who was up next.

May I just say? The library event was lovely, and I thank WorldCon, in the person of Patricia Parsons, for working with the Sierra View staff to make it happen. We were very glad to be a part of this outreach effort, and hope that future WorldCons can find a way to continue the tradition.

We finished out Wednesday by having dinner with Mem and Terry, then returned to the hotel to crash early.

Thursday started with a journey to the Peppermill (WorldCon hired real buses to shuttle between the hotels! Buses that knelt down to let passengers aboard. Camel buses in the desert. Was anything ever cooler? Ahem.). So, anyhow, to the Peppermill, where we speedily got lost on our way to the writing workshop, and enlisted the aid of a gentleman with a broom to set us on the proper path.

The workshop, despite being down one participant, went well, I thought; both of those remaining being serious about their reading and their writing. After, Steve and I had lunch in Biscotti’s, bused back over to the Convention Center to do our stint at the SFWA table, hosted a sold-out kaffeeklatsch, checked in at the FoL Fan Table, did a drawing for free! books!, signed books in the Dealer’s Room; met Judy Bemis for dinner; did Art Night (which was rather less…extravagant than other Art Nights I’ve attended), and hit the SFWA Suite, where I left Steve chatting with Dave Smeds when I went back to the room to nurse a altitude headache. (Note to self: In high, dry climates, drink water constantly! Really.)

Friday we were scheduled but lightly. I met up with Phyllis Irene Radford, whom I hadn’t seen in years — was it the Kansas City Nebulas? — and we did some Fast Catch Up(tm). Our reading was standing room only, followed by a signing, then the Baen Authors Dinner, and the FoL-only party, which I left early, being a poor thing and easily exhausted.

Saturday our dance card was full to overflowing. We started out with an 8 a.m. breakfast at Toucan Charlie’s with sixty! stalwart Friends of Liad. That? Was amazing. And gratifying. We had a good time and hope everyone who attended, did, as well. I’m sorry we didn’t get a chance to talk to everyone — but, sixty? Who could have predicted?

So, after breakfast, we hit the first panel of the day — Collaboration, moderated by Steve. I do have a complaint here. I had checked in with Con Ops regarding the taping policy and had been told, definitively, that no taping of panels would be allowed. We arrived to find our co-panelists (the gentleman of the set is very avid podcaster; the lady apparently also, but he was doing the rigging) rigging up an Entire Podcasting System in order to tape the panel prior to being broadcast on his/their site. We explained about Ops, the gentleman allowed as how it was easier to get forgiveness than permission, and continued his set-up.

Now, this annoyed — and still annoys — me for a couple reasons. One, Ops. Two, he never asked us if we would mind providing free content for his site. Now, had he asked us, I might’ve said OK, sure, whatever, since I’m generally well-disposed toward himself. But he didn’t ask, he just assumed, and now we all have to put up with me being cranky with him about this, which is too bad.

So.

After Collaboration, Continuity, and a star-studded cast: Lois Bujold, Eric Flint, Dean Wesley Smith, Steve Miller; Sharon Lee moderating. This was played to a large room, full, as you might imagine from the list of panelists. We had a lively, and as people stopped to tell me later in the con, informative discussion about series/character/worldbuilding continuity. It was a pleasure to moderate; I had fun and I hope my co-panelists did, as well.

After that, we raced off to the SFWA meeting, then I went on to the Urban Fantasy panel with Tim Pratt, Larry Correia, Lisa Goldstein; ably moderated by Madeleine Robins. Another fun, well-attended panel.

Dinner with Myles and Nancy followed, then on to the Baen Paty, and thence to the Friends of Liad Party.

Sunday was about touring the Dealer’s Room, where we signed more books, talking to bunches of people, I bought the aforementioned corset, talked to more people, had dinner with Eve Ackerman, her lovely husband, Steve-whose-last-name-I-didn’t-get, Toni Weisskopf, eventually found our room again and crashed.

Monday, we had a good-bye breakfast with Shawna and Angie, and leisurely began our fraught journey back to Chicago.

The Friends of Liad came to this convention in droves; we were stunned — and gratified. Angie, Debbie, Shawna, and Thuy, who womaned the fan table, did all the party prep and acted as Message Center for Steve and me, were Beyond Awesome; it was in every sense a working con for them, and we’re very grateful for their efforts.

…and here ends the con report.




Originally published at Sharon Lee, Writer. You can comment here or there.

Date: 2011-09-08 02:57 pm (UTC)
reedrover: (Default)
From: [personal profile] reedrover
It was so nice to get to meet you in person. My mother was thrilled for me. And did you recieve the e-mail with the Friday night photo?

Date: 2011-09-08 04:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rolanni.livejournal.com
It was nice to meet you, too!

Um...I'm think so, yes, on the picture, thank you! I've been doing a LOT of email and it all sorta blurs after awhile. Brain's getting old, sigh.

Sounds like a Great Con

Date: 2011-09-08 03:14 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
...wish I had been there. Casino hotels are not such bad venues for cons -- I've been to many of various types in Las Vegas -- but you do need to plot the landscape. The connection to the library for readings was inspired. re the podcast assumer, I agree that you should be annoyed by his not asking, or allowing unrecorded times for you and Steve if you wished, as a courtesy. He could have made up for it quite a bit if he had also offered you a copy of the tape for your own use -- an option still available... .
Sounds like you've recovered well. Now back to work :).
Cheers.
Regina

Catchup Comments

Date: 2011-09-08 04:01 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
this is just to catch up on some comments thought previously for your attention:
1. Thank you for Kin Ties, Intelligent Design, and the first (third??) of The Fortunate Cards of Destiny. Hope to see more of that one as well. And also thanks for the interim shorts publishing on SplinterUniverse -- it's great. Will donate.
2. Paper chapbooks are important to me and those of us who don't e-book and want a more permanent version. Since you do have some already existing work that can be formalized (e.g., the first two mentioned above plus the forthcoming story next week), is it very hard to personally publish (and maybe sign) a version for sale? I hope not. Being greedy: a Winter Chapbook could even include those plus the October proposed story and be a $15+ size.
3. There was a third comment when I started this, but my mind is going. Oh well. It'll come back to me later. Thanks for the list of author vs pubisher responsibilities -- very interestingly done. I am not into social media (yet) or a daily journalist so I read a group of days at once and have learned that leaving a comment on an old page doesn't help much. :) Thanks for the insight into your work and adventures.
Cheers.
Regina

Re: Catchup Comments

Date: 2011-09-08 04:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rolanni.livejournal.com
Re: 2 -- Alas; I fear not. I'm sorry.

The last chapbook got us more than 800 orders, which is great, but...We then had to process, pack and ship them all, then answer people who thought they'd ordered, but hadn't; or thought their order was lost (which it sometimes was, and we had to establish that) and -- considering everything else that's on our plate, and Steve's health, I can't justify us-personally doing a Winter chapbook.

We are exploring other ways to make paper chapbooks/collections available to folks who prefer them, but...no decisions yet.

Re: Catchup Comments

Date: 2011-09-09 12:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Absolutely bizarre thought, but Word (I think it was?) will happily make up a printable chapbook format (double-sided, with the pages already formatted for printing and collated correctly). Would it make any sense whatsoever to make that kind of format available so that people who really, truly want a printed chapbook can do it (almost) themselves? Let them do the printing...

Date: 2011-09-08 04:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keristor.livejournal.com
Sounds pretty good apart from the taping. I've seen similar in other places, some people do have the attitude "I'll do it and then stop if they complain" and don't seem to care that it gets them a bad reputation *sigh*.

I do have a general question -- why do I think that Reno is or was in California? I know it's near the border, but was it ever actually in CA? The only thing I can find about it on the net is that apparently I'm not the only person who thinks its there...

Date: 2011-09-08 04:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rolanni.livejournal.com
Well...it might be because it is very close to the border (which kept throwing me all con. People would say, "I came in from California to see." and I'd think, "Wow, all that way to see us?"

It may also be because of Las Vegas? Another gambling/marriage mecca, much larger and glitzier than Reno, and! In California.

Date: 2011-09-08 04:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keristor.livejournal.com
It could easily be that I mix them up, not having been to either place. I blame my age (I've been blaming my age for mental glitches for the last 40 or so years since I was a teenager!)...

Date: 2011-09-08 04:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kinzel.livejournal.com
This is why I why I usually plan the trips, or that when you do it AAA gets to use their trip-tik computers. CA's border is west of Reno, and Vegas is east of it.

I think the thing is that Las Vegas doesn't have an continental class train station, so we've never stopped there.

Geography/Space continum

Date: 2011-09-11 06:16 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I, being from California, think of Reno/Tahoe as being a day trip, so it was very easy decision to come all that way to see you. It was the dusty cars coming in from Idaho and Illinois that kept surprising me. I think anything east of Reno as being mysterious and far far away.

I was one of the lucky 60 that made it to breakfast, a most pleasant event even though I was on the satellite table. Thank you and Steve for circulating. I say lucky 60 as I know that there were people who didn't make the list.

Reno and Tahoe are often parsed by AAA and others as being part of California for various reasons. As noted, the closest driving areas tend to be from Ca.
Also, from a strictly geographical perspective, Reno is further west than LA (check it out, Southern Ca makes a major easterly jog) so if borders were drawn longitudinally, perhaps it would be.

Deb


CA-NV border dispute

Date: 2011-09-08 04:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] psw456.livejournal.com
Did you find this article?http://www.lvrj.com/news/43760307.html
Doesn't mention Reno specifically, but has more info than I was familiar with previously.

Re: CA-NV border dispute

Date: 2011-09-08 04:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keristor.livejournal.com
No, I didn't, but I had some idea that the border had been disputed.

(BTW, your comment got spam-trapped, te spam filter doesn't like links to other sites apparently...)

Date: 2011-09-08 06:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stitchwhich.livejournal.com
You have doomed my inner ear for thh rest of the day - as soon as I read your title I had the song running through my head. And then it morphed to the "Micky's Mouseketeer's" filk. Doomed, I am doomed...

And so will my husband be when he gets home and I sing it to him. :)

Date: 2011-09-09 01:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enleve.livejournal.com
Me too, I have the song in my head now.

a lil map fun

Date: 2011-09-08 10:10 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Reno and Los Vegas are in Nevada(known as The Silver State). That is where the residents of California (The Golden State) leave their silver.

Date: 2011-09-09 02:44 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Off Topic BUT! I saw Saltation in Wal-Mart outside of Austin yesterday. And there was only one copy left.
Barbara in Dry, dry, dry Texas

Date: 2011-09-09 05:06 am (UTC)
pedanther: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pedanther
So, regarding the podcasting, it would in fact have been easier to get your permission than your forgiveness?

Con

Date: 2011-09-09 05:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] claire774.livejournal.com
Seems like the con was really nice. You see....you are famous now with crowds of fans coming out to see you.

As for that taping guy. Why don't you ask for a copy since they had told you no recording? Then if he won't give you one you can be not only mad at him but complain to the opps guy too.

As for chapbooks. Why don't you wait until you have enough short stories to publish them all together? I'd buy that book quick quick.

I bet the cats are glad you're back.
C.


Date: 2011-09-09 01:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com
It's always nice to hang out with you on the train!

Stan Rogers!

Date: 2011-09-12 01:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] od-mind.livejournal.com
Between the Breaks... Live.

Thank you for reminding me of an album I haven't listened to in WAY too long.

Oh the year was 1778
(How I wish I was in Sherbrooke now...)

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