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A Mile Closer to the Stars
Program Participant Biographies, Continued
Alphabetical List of Participants * * To Previous Page of Biographies * * To Next Page of Biographies
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Robbie Bourget
Robbie Bourget started out as an Ottawa area fan in Canada,
where she became involved in the local Doctor Who club and the Ottawa
Science Fiction Society (OSFS) before moving to Los Angeles and
becoming involved in the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society (LASFS).
Robbie has worked a variety of conventions, beginning as a rover at
Maplecon in Ottawa (although they called it Security), moving on to
Loscons in Los Angeles, Worldcons in a variety of places, and Gallifrey
One, the local Doctor Who convention in Los Angeles, now in its 20th
year. She has worked predominantly in operations, but has been Art Show
head at Eastercons in the UK, Treasurer for Loscons and Gallifreys,
Division Head and Vice Chair at Worldcon level, Chair of both Loscon
and Gallifrey one (more than once) and now finds herself Co-Chair of
the 2009 Worldcon in Montreal, Anticipation. Robbie has also been a
club fan, belonging to the Doctor Who club and OSFS in Ottawa; been
President of the LASFS and Treasurer of same for 13 years (many of
those years happily paired with Elayne Pelz) as well as belonging to
the LASFS Board for more years; and been a Councillor for the Time
Meddlers of Los Angeles for a few years. On top of all those
endeavours, Robbie has also taken the time to participate in four apas
(LASFAPA, APA-L, Gallifreyan Home Companion, and WOOF - once!) as well
as helping to co-edit Holier Than Thou with Marty Cantor for several
years. Robbie was also the co-DUFF winner with Marty Cantor in 1985 for
Aussiecon II and produced her own version of the trip report which was
printed Ace Double style with Marty's.
For reasons known only to herself, Robbie has resided in the
UK since 1998 where she continues her con-running fannish life whilst
abandoning all the rest. ;>
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Robert Hole
Robert Hole was born in a Michigan snow storm, and moved to a
Fresno heat wave when he was 8 months old. He trained as a biologist
(systematics and ecology) and has worked at the National Museum of
Natural History in Washington, D.C. "I worked for US Fish and Wildlife
Service, though, not the Smithsonian," he explains.
He's written one book, Dinosaurs and Other Ancient Animals
(available through online retailers). Robert has been a dinosaur nut
since before he could read and never grew out of it, though he has a
slew of papers. A bibliography should be available at his website.
He is an artist, doing both spec fic and wildlife-related, and
in the SF field considers himself more artist than writer.
He is currently working with the Roseville Historical
Society's Carnegie Museum, a local history museum in Roseville,
California.
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Bill Thomasson
Bill Thomasson is science/medial writer and activist both in
politics and on disability issues.
He was born in 1936 in Pine Bluff, Arkansas and came north to
attend the University of Chicago. He dropped out after a few years and
followed the traditional family occupation of railway clerk until he
was drafted. "Luckily, no one was shooting at us just then," he
recalled. "President Kennedy announced he was sending 'advisors' to an
obscure place called Viet Nam the month I got my release from active
duty."
Thomasson went back to school and got a biochemistry PhD from
Caltech in 1970. He taught in medical school and a couple of colleges
for the next 8 years, until those jobs dried up. That's when he decided
to try science/medical writing. He started out doing magazine articles,
starting at the top by doing his first article for the Atlantic
Monthly. After stints in public relations he shifted into medical
writing, with increasing emphasis on helping researchers and their
corporate sponsors craft articles for medical and dental research
journals. For the past year and a half, he's been helping researchers
in Ann Arbor with their research articles and grant applications.
In 2000 his second eye went bad (age-related macular
degeneration), leaving him legally blind. Said Thomasson, "Being who I
am, got me involved in disability activism including helping plan the
5th annual Disability Pride Parade."
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Christian B. McGuire
Christian B. McGuire was born a normal person in the distant
past. Exposure to sensawonda radiation leaking from C. S. Lewis and
Robert A. Heinlein mutated him into a reader.
Sometime later the volunteering bug sunk his mandibles into
Christian's leg and he's been having delusions of being a con-runner
ever since.
Christian is currently responsible for special projects for
The Illustrators & Matte Artists, Local 790, having assembled the
exhibit currently in Hall D, and looks forward to interviewing Rick
Sternbach for Denvention 3.
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Daniel D. Dubrick
Daniel D. Dubrick is an aerospace and aviation historian.
Since 1980 he has been active in northwest US fandom as a regular
convention participant and volunteer.
Nicknamed "Kahboi" (pronounced "Cowboy" in English), Dubrick
has for many years been the Editor for the H.R. McMillan Planetarium's
affiliated space and astronomy educational BBS "SpaceBase(tm)." At the
peak of Fidonet's success, the results of Dan's editing effort were
reaching out to over 5,000 amateur BBS's world wide weekly and a
readership estimated in the tens of thousands.
Said Dubrick, "I've spent two weeks, as press, at John F.
Kennedy Space Center, following STS-89 from launch to landing, actually
spotting Endeavour shortly after the double sonic boom." On his annual
holidays he can be found prowling the aerospace bone yards of the
Arizona desert studying American aerospace history (but they still
won't let him into the B-52 that dropped the X-15).
Currently he is working on converting "SpaceBase" and its gigs
of space science news data from a BBS system to an Internet based
archive with an Internet e-mail distribution system.
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David B. Coe
David B. Coe is the award-winning author of nine fantasy
novels and the occasional short story. His LonTobyn Chronicle (Children
of Amarid, The Outlanders, and Eagle-Sage, all
published by Tor Books) received the Crawford Fantasy Award, given
annually by the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts
to the best work by a new author in fantasy.
Coe received his undergraduate degree from Brown University
and then attended Stanford University as a graduate student in United
States history. He received both a Master's and a Ph.D. from Stanford,
completing his doctoral dissertation in U.S. environmental history in
1993. He briefly taught history at the University of the South, and
continues to give guest lectures in the University's environmental
studies program. Added Coe, "I'm also an avid birdwatcher and have, at
previous cons, done presentations on birds of prey and how to use them
accurately and realistically in writing."
In 2006, Coe was a guest speaker at the Magic Casements
Speculative Fiction Festival in Sydney, Australia. He has twice been a
guest speaker at the Sewanee Young Writers' Conference at the
University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, and has twice been a
faculty member at the annual South Carolina Writers' Workshop
Conference.
Coe's novels have been translated into more than half a dozen
languages, including Russian, German, French, and Spanish. He has also
published several short stories. The most recent, "Cassie's Story,"
appears in the current issue of Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic
Medicine Show.
His latest novel, The Sorcerers' Plague (Tor Books),
is the first installment in his Blood of the Southlands
trilogy, a follow-up to the critically acclaimed Winds of the
Forelands sequence (Rules of Ascension, Seeds of Betrayal,
Bonds of Vengeance, Shapers of Darkness, Weavers
of War).
Visit his website.
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Diana Herald
Diana Tixier Herald is the author of several readers' advisory
guides including four editions of Genreflecting: A Guide to Reading
Interests, Teen Genreflecting (now in its second edition),
and Fluent in Fantasy. She co-authored Fluent in Fantasy:
The Next Generation and Strictly Science Fiction with
Bonnie Kunzel. She is a regular reviewer of science fiction, fantasy,
and paranormal novels for Booklist. She is the series editor
for Library Unlimited's Genreflecting Series of readers'
advisory guides and senior editor for Reader's Advisor Online.
Her roots are deep in the mountain West including Pueblo
ancestors and 16th century Spanish settlers. She grew up as an Air
Force brat, living in Okinawa, Arizona, and Michigan but spent half her
time in Colorado. After a decade as a fiber artist utilizing her degree
from Western State College of Colorado she earned a master's degree in
Librarianship and Information Management from the University of Denver.
After serving as a library director and popular materials librarian she
is now a guerilla librarian putting teens together with the books they
will love.
A frequent presenter at library conferences Herald has chaired
two major preconferences about science fiction and fantasy for the
Public Library Association and the Young Adult Library Services
Association both divisions of the American Library Association. She has
appeared on panels at several World Science Fiction Conventions and at
DragonCon.
She lives on the edge of a Rocky Mountain canyon at 7,000 ft.
altitude with her husband in a sustainable house they built from
recycled materials. They have been living completely off-grid for 5
years.
Herald reads a book a day and her favorite quote is from Betty
Rosenberg's first law of reading, "Never apologize for your reading
tastes." She adds her own frequently quoted corollary, "No two people
ever read the same book."
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Ed Meskys
Ed Meskys, age 72, has been an active fan since 1955, and a
fanzine publisher since 1959. He started fanzine NIEKAS in
1962, which has been nominated for the Hugo three times and received it
in 1966. It is still published, albeit very irregularly.
Meskys was born in Brooklyn in 1936 of parents born in
Lithuania. His father was displaced by WWI in 1917. His father later
married and brought his mother from over from Lithuania in 1930. Meskys
spoke Lithuanian at home and learned English as second language when
started school. In 1962 he took a job at the Lawrence Radiation Labs in
Livermore, California, where he had a "Q" (nuclear weapons) security
clearance. He also held summer jobs at Fort Monmouth NJ (secret
clearance) and NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. He has a BS
(cum laude) and MS in Physics from St. John's University in New York.
He preferred teaching to research and started at Belknap College in
Center Harbor in 1966.
He became blind in 1971 from a detached and torn retina in his
remaining eye (having previously lost the other one in 1953). Meskys
has served on the Governor's Commission on Disabilities in New
Hampshire since its founding in 1978 and was an alternate delegate to
the White House Conference on Disabilities in Washington 1978. He
joined the National Federation of the Blind of NH in 1975 and has been
a state officer since 1976, ten of those years off and on as state
president.
As for SF, Meskys explained, "I was always interested in
science fiction and got involved with the world-wide network of
enthusiasts ('fandom') in 1955, started attending conventions in 1956,
and publishing an amateur magazine in 1959." He has been married to fan
Sandra Parker Shorter since 1989, and has a son Stanley from his first
marriage. He was also president of the Tolkien Society of America for
five years.
In addition to NIEKAS, he does the free e-fanzine, The
View from Entropy Hall, which can be found on efanzines.com.
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Elaine Isaak
Elaine Isaak began writing stories at an early age, and her
mother's keepsake chest contains several tiny spiral-bound notebooks
full of childish block-lettered tales. She spent much of her youth
guiding her friends on imaginary quests and rescues in the forests of
central Massachusetts.
After discarding other career options including archaeology
and genetic engineering, Elaine elected to attend the Rhode Island
School of Design, intending to study fashion design and perhaps work
for the theater, combining her interests in art and literature.
Instead, she opted for a sculpture major where she created artworks
based on the history of books and wrote an installation proposal no
artwork could hope to live up to.
While studying abroad in Italy, Elaine acknowledged her inner
drive and withdrew from school to work on a novel. In the meantime, she
worked creating animal mascot costumes for corporations and parades.
During this time, Elaine wrote The Singer's Crown, the third
novel she began, and the second one she completed. In 1997, she founded
Curious Characters, creating and marketing unique stuffed animals like
greelings, hyffers, and the Amazing Zahnee! Part of the plan included a
"storyletter," The Curious Times, where Elaine told stories
about the mythos of these creatures to introduce them to the public.
Rekindling an old passion for poetry, Elaine became a regular
at a local coffee house open mike where she discovered a new passion:
Edward, a fellow poet, who married her. They bought an old house,
painted it mint green, and moved in two cats, two computers and a
collection of masks from around the world. That same year, she attended
the Odyssey Speculative Fiction Workshop where she learned to sculpt
words into something stronger, bolder and better by far.
After taking time to visit India, China, and Mongolia, Elaine
and Ed welcomed their daughter, Laurel, and new son, Gabriel. In
addition to soft sculpture, Curious Characters specializes in a line of
fun and supportive small-scale metal sculptures available at gift shops
across the country. Elaine writes in a quiet office in her new brick
house, where she is free at any moment to leap into a new adventure.
The Singer's Crown appeared in 2005 from Eos Books,
with its sequel, The Eunuch's Heir appearing the following
year. Elaine is thrilled to announce that The Bastard Queen has
recently found a home at Swimming Kangaroo, and will finally be
available to readers at the beginning of 2010.
In the meantime, she has written eight other books ranging
from dark medieval fantasy to romantic suspense, which she hopes will
infiltrate bookstores shortly. She also writes the Lady Blade column on
fantasy writing at Alien Skin Magazine on-line.
Elaine lives in New Hampshire and you can visit her website to find out
why you do not want to be her hero.
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John Hertz
John Hertz was given the Big Heart Award in 2003. He has two
Hugo nominations as Best Fanwriter ('07, '06). He was sent to the 2007
Worldcon by a one-time travel fund, HANA (Hertz Across to Nippon
Alliance). At cons he can be found moderating panels, leading Art Show
tours, as a Masquerade judge or M.C., or in the Fanzine Lounge. His
fanzine is Vanamonde; two collections of his writing have been
published, Dancing and Joking ('05) and West of the Moon ('02). He is
one of three judges for the Rotsler Award (annual, for long-time
wonderworking with graphic art in fanzines; carries $300 honorarium).
His favorite non-SF authors are Chuang Tzu, Maimonides, Nabokov, and
Sayers. He drinks Talisker. Born in Chicago, he lives in Los Angeles;
he went to Antioch (B.A. philosophy, National Merit Scholar) and
Northwestern (J.D. cum laude). He says, "The people I have bitten in
the neck have been female. It was peaceable and seemed a good idea at
the time."
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Alphabetical List of Participants * * To Previous Page of Biographies * * To Next Page of Biographies
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