[Conventions]
[conventions] Worldcon, day four
Again with the morning walk yesterday. That was nice. Once I got sorted out for the day, I had breakfast with Hugo award winner Lynne Thomas, who in her official capacity at Northern Illinois University is also my archivist. We talked about end of life and posthumous issues around my archives, with a lot of focus on electronic and Internet material. Not long after that, I met with my agent for a fairly similar conversation about my projects in progress and what might or might not come next.
I had a last minute invitation to be a guest on the SF Squeecast live recording session. Among other things, we discussed the movie Rubber [ imdb ], and I told the bear joke. (Which I originally got from Lynn Flewelling.)
As a result of all this, I never really had lunch, just dropped straight into my reading. I read “The Cancer Catechism”, my story in the new Dark Faith 2 anthology. That was moving and strange to read. Waterloo Productions showed up to film the reading.
I went down to the dealers’ room to sign books at the Fairwood Press booth, then popped back upstairs for my final panel on Stalking the Elusive Story Idea.
After that, it was Hugo madness.
I’d found out literally two days ago that I would be presenting the Campbell tiara. I’ve done this before, but had assumed some other arrangement was in play this year. So I did the pre-ceremony walkthrough, then cruised upstairs to tux up. I was also invited to the Hugo reception, which is always fun. (Except that I never really had dinner, either.) Some awesome outfits there, including Seanan McGuire.
They were also giving out temporary tattoos of tardises, daleks and Hugo rockets. Jim C. Hines got his as a tramp stamp.
Me, I got a rocket on the forehead.
I’d told the artist to make it as obnoxiously colored as possible. I got a sparkly gay pride rocket, basically.

Me and Heather Shaw comparing rockets, photo by Sally McLennan
The ceremony was as always awesome. I celebrate the winners and commiserate with the losers. Also, I was quite pleased to help give E. Lily Yu her Campbell award. Afterwards, I got a picture of her and some friends and family, partly to show
the_child
The Hugo Loser’s Party, and a quick tour of the other parties and bars to say farewell capped off my night.
This morning I went for a walk with Dani Martin.
I’m hanging out a bit more with Sally McLennan before hitting it for the airport and my trip to Baltimore, where Lisa Costello will put up with me all week. So I won’t really have a Worldcon, day five.
It’s been a blast, folks. Thank you everyone.
P.S. — Sorry I failed to tag everyone in the photos, but I am very tight for time as I make this post.
Photos © 2012, Joseph E. Lake, Jr. except as noted.
This work by Joseph E. Lake, Jr. is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
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Posted: 6:13 am Mon September 03 2012 |
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Jay
I am so very, very glad that you had fun, and I am hoping that the second opinion process will be helpful to you in ways which go beyond the most obvious ones.
There are times when one can feel like a hamster on a wheel, pedalling away but getting nowhere, and I think that, despite your extraordinary fortitude, you have been increasingly in that place. When you go for a second opinion you are stepping off that wheel and demonstrating that, whatever the results, you are not a hamster. Nor, for that matter, a gherbil.
You are a man, and a good one at that; I will be thinking of you and the child these coming days…
I’m not sure whether you wanted help IDing people or not, but just in case:
In the picture of Lily, the woman with the red scarf is the writer Emily Jiang. The woman to the other side of Lily is her sister, Jenn. I don’t recognize the person with the “Teddy” name tag. Sorry.
Thanks! I didn’t know Emily or Jenn.
Teddy is the daughter of Locus editor Kirsten Gong-Wong, btw.