Halloween? No, just an active costuming contingent!
Archon 43 will be held in Collinsville again next year, Oct. 4-6, 2019. But don't expect to book a room in the Doubletree. It's already full up.
IMAGES: All of the photos in this post were taken by me, Jan S. Gephardt, at Archon 42, between October 12-14, 2018. You may freely re-post or reblog them, but in all fairness please include an attribution to me, and a link back to this post. The cover art for What's Bred in the Bone is a color comp by Jody A. Lee; she promises the finished art is coming soon.
I enjoyed my return to Archon, a St. Louis-area convention I'd often attended when it was scheduled in the summer (I know: back in ancient days!). In more recent decades, this convention has become a major event for restaurants and hotels near the Gateway Center in Collinsville, IL. The one I'm writing about here was held October 12-14, 2018.
I enjoyed the costumes--but what I managed to catch in photos are a far cry from their full extent. For a better glimpse of what tends to wander the halls of Archon, there's a great photo lineup from #41, by Thomas Crone in St. Louis Magazine online, and the Masquerade has a Facebook page you also may enjoy. Here's another rather comprehensive look at the convention you also may enjoy.
One thing about Archon at the Gateway Center: you walk a lot. Even the main convention hotel, the Doubletree, isn't attached to the Gateway Center, so you're walking wherever you stay (we stayed at the just-as-nearby Fairfield Inn, which was sung and well-kept). The other thing about the Doubletree is that it books up each year in a flash. It wasn't the best of weather for trekking though the landscape, this year. I was glad I'd brought my trench coat.
Of course, I always want to display my artwork at conventions I attend. Here's my Archon 42 Art Show display.
I also love to be on, and also attend, panels. I have photos from several enjoyable ones, below. This year, I also have put a particular emphasis on my readings, as a way to both learn what other authors are writing, and to give people an advance glimpse of my to-be-released-this-winter science fiction novel What's Bred in the Bone.
The programming staff mostly put me on Art Track panels, rather than the writing ones I've become used to lately, so I had a chance to do things such as dust off my art teacher skills for Basic Drawing and geek out with Rachael Mayo about art supplies, quality, and when/how you can afford to go with a cheaper option.
Rachael Mayo (seated at left) brought samples of different kinds of both paper and colored pencils (some cheap, some top-grade professional, some in between), for the audience to test at the end of the Saturday panel titled "Crayola is Fine, Right?: Art on a Budget." |
One of the first programming items I attended on Friday of the convention was one of their three-person Author Readings, this one featuring, L-R: Donna J.W. Munro, Marella Sands, and Christine Nobbe, who read a science fiction story she often shares with her gifted classes. |
The "Diversity in Speculative Fiction" panel on Friday night of the con explored long-overdue changes developing as sf becomes more inclusive. L-R Participants: Jennifer Stolzer, Kathleen Kayembe, Camille Faye, and Debbie Manber Kupfer, who moderated. |
The Sunday afternoon "Alternate Paths to Publishing" panel had such an engaged audience that we overshot our scheduled stop-time, and missed Closing Ceremonies. L-R, George Sirois ("SEAR-oy") moderated; Brad R. Cook, Camille Faye, and Debbie Manber Kupfer added a variety of thoughts and reflections on their experiences. |
Archon 43 will be held in Collinsville again next year, Oct. 4-6, 2019. But don't expect to book a room in the Doubletree. It's already full up.
IMAGES: All of the photos in this post were taken by me, Jan S. Gephardt, at Archon 42, between October 12-14, 2018. You may freely re-post or reblog them, but in all fairness please include an attribution to me, and a link back to this post. The cover art for What's Bred in the Bone is a color comp by Jody A. Lee; she promises the finished art is coming soon.
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