Daniel's Reviews > 40 Years of Gen Con
40 Years of Gen Con
by Robin D. Laws (Goodreads Author)
by Robin D. Laws (Goodreads Author)
Daniel's review
bookshelves: rpg
Apr 12, 10
bookshelves: rpg
Read from February 28 to March 28, 2010 — I own a copy, read count: 1
Hard to believe that Gen Con has been around for 40+ years. Heck, hard to believe that roleplaying games have been around for almost that long! And right there, in the space where believing these statements are, amazingly, true, is where 40 Years of Gen Con lives.
Robin Laws had his work cut out for him in setting out to put together this book. Made up of a pastiche of chronological interview quotes from a vast array of people associated with Gen Con throughout its history, the book gives you a transcribed oral history of this most central gathering of the Hobby Gaming Industry. From its days as a tiny gathering at chez Gygax, to its move to current and gigantic home in Indianapolis, you can follow the wonderful and weird history of the convention, and in many ways of the industry as well.
If I have one qualm about the book is that, personally I would have preferred an actual written-out narrative of the history instead of the put-it-together-yourself approach of the various interview segments. A thousand kudos to Robin Laws for having the patience and the archeological skills to assemble a narrative out of all those interviews, though; that alone should win him some sort of prize.
Our hobby, our industry, has officially entered its second generation of life, and we've already begun to lose some of the pioneers. I continue to be amazed that there has been no effort to create a biography of the hobby/industry up to now, though 40 Years of Gen Con is a fantastic proxy that deserves to be in every gamer's library.
Robin Laws had his work cut out for him in setting out to put together this book. Made up of a pastiche of chronological interview quotes from a vast array of people associated with Gen Con throughout its history, the book gives you a transcribed oral history of this most central gathering of the Hobby Gaming Industry. From its days as a tiny gathering at chez Gygax, to its move to current and gigantic home in Indianapolis, you can follow the wonderful and weird history of the convention, and in many ways of the industry as well.
If I have one qualm about the book is that, personally I would have preferred an actual written-out narrative of the history instead of the put-it-together-yourself approach of the various interview segments. A thousand kudos to Robin Laws for having the patience and the archeological skills to assemble a narrative out of all those interviews, though; that alone should win him some sort of prize.
Our hobby, our industry, has officially entered its second generation of life, and we've already begun to lose some of the pioneers. I continue to be amazed that there has been no effort to create a biography of the hobby/industry up to now, though 40 Years of Gen Con is a fantastic proxy that deserves to be in every gamer's library.
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Reading Progress
| 02/28/2010 | page 40 |
|
23.81% | "Wait, Steve Jackson is from England? And he co-founded Games Workshop?" |
| 02/28/2010 | page 42 |
|
25.0% | "Thanks to all who clarified that there are TWO Steve Jacksons in gaming." |
| 03/23/2010 | page 130 |
|
77.38% | "I misplaced it and can't find it to finish it." |
| 03/27/2010 | page 168 |
|
100.0% | "Finished it. Great job @RobinDLaws. Review forthcoming." |
