Travellers in Black
FAMOUS ARTISTS Jim Burns and Fangorn
were discussing vast Art Auction profits when an art lover broke in:
`Excuse me, I love your pictures. Do you have a catalogue or do commissions?'
-- this addressed to, actually, Rachel Baker. Collapse of stout
artists.
RED SALES IN THE SUNSET: 30 people had joined
the KGB at last count. Beware the midnight knock on the door from Brian
Aldiss, the entire Family Harrison and Anne McCaffrey
(who will be carrying a small, monogrammed flame-thrower).
HOT WEERDE. Early copies of the new Weerde
anthology The Book of the Ancients have been sighted, to cries
of `How much are Roc paying Writers of the Future for nicking their
cover?' `Go to bed,' grits Midnight Rose lich Alex Stewart.
KATE SOLOMON cleared the bar (c. 0400)
by expounding her fears of global destruction, the collapse of the British
educational system, the starvation of millions, etc. P.Weston soothingly
advised her to read The Player of Games, which offers solutions
to all these problems. Kate dissented: `Someone will take it over and
run things.' She was dragged to bed after one final exchange: `You'd
be a rotten teacher!' `You couldn't run a doorknob factory!'
MARY CELESTE MYSTERY SOLVED BY I.SORENSEN!
`Dave Langford did the after-dinner speech.'
The Voices of Time
CLOSING CREDITS. Heliograph could not
have been brought into existence without the help of very many people,
but nevertheless it was. (Chorus: `Start again, Langford!') Er
... please see past issues' credits. Harry Bell drew the logo and cartoon.
Special grovels to Brian Aldiss, Barry Bayley, John Brunner, Jenny Glover,
Andy Porter of SF Chronicle (who faxed his Embarrassing Birthdays
List for April), Chris Priest, Alex `E.J.Thribb' Stewart and 1,000 Elephants.
TRUE GRID. HdF want a copy of Helicon's map
of their conference space: it's better than their own -- which is based
on the Contrivance map....
UNSUNG HEROS [SIC] OF FANDOM: the Freucon committee
members who are still too mentally and financially exhausted from running
Freucon to get to Jersey. Thanks from the Helicon committee for convincing
so many people that Eurocons are a fun event that they realy (sic)
want to attend.The Helicon Committee
ZOMBIE FACTOID -- IT'S DEAD TRUE! (or,
DEATH IS NOT THE FINNISH) ... To become an official
zombie you have to have a measured Body-mass Index of ~19 or under.
This Index is: weight (kg) divided by the square of height (m); i.e.,
I = wt/ht2. A 1.8m (6ft) zombie weighs under 62.4kg (138 Earth
lb [© 1993 Kaleidoscope]) and thus, empirically, the zombie-hood
Index I þ 19.26.
NOT A SPOOF! Inconceivable congratulate Inconceivable
on their publicity campaign and on actually managing to organize a real
con. We look forward to Inconceivable II, The Eastercon.
PANIC AT 1300: Only 6 bars of chocolate left.
FAN FUNDS AUCTION. Thanks to our bidders, donors
of material and helpers, we raised a total of £141.90 1/2 : £52.50
for FATW, £63.40 for GUFF,
£26.00 for TAFF and 1/2 p for Thog. Pam
Wells
WEIRD SCIENCE. Eldritch, unhallowed experiments,
involving the addition of transfinite masses of chocolate to a swimming
pool and unforbidden only through a curious lack of imagination on the
hotel's part, today resulted in the creation of `The Shallow Ones'.
John Dallman
UPC SF AWARD 1993. Original sf work, submitted
under pseudonym (real name etc. in sealed envelope), 75-110pp, 2 copies,
A4 double-spaced (30 lines/page); prize 1M pesetas (þ$10,000)
plus potential 250,000pta if the work (this is the difficult bit) is
in neither Catalan nor Spanish. Entries by 30/8/'93 to Consell Social
de la UPC, Edifici ETSAB, Diagonal 649, 08028 Barcelona.
SUCK ON THAT, SMOFCON! We have drunk all
the Old Jersey Bitter. (Martin Hoare has just stepped out. He may be
gone some time....)
XENOBIOLOGY QUIZ RESULTS: 1 Marcus Rowland
86%, 2 Peter Wareham 78%, 3 Dermot Dobson 77%, 4
Thog the Mighty (what this `per cent' crap?). 14 entries (out
of 50+ papers sold); these will be returned with certificates where
appropriate. Answers at Information. Robert Sneddon
CENSORSHIP IN SF: This panel was þþþþþþþþ!
RESTAURANT TESSITURA: Last night in Albert
Ramsbottom's the real difference between an author and a critic (John
Clute) was revealed -- not that a critic uses words like `apotropaic'
but that he finishes all his Cod Whopper and the remains
of someone else's. Ramsey Campbell
FOOD FREAKS READ ON. Paparazzi's, Castle St
(about 100m W of 'bus station); cheap Italian, very good; specially
recommended is the Gorgonzola in Cream Sauce with Pasta and Stuff. (`Very
filling,' burps Hibernian Correspondent Alastair Wheeler-Reid, `and
under a fiver including tips!!')
COUNT 'EM! Pedro Jorge Romero boasts that he
bought five copies of the Encyclopaedia of SF.
MASQUERADE. Best in Show: The Willis
Family+.
UNIVERSAL RULER -- now Noah Ward, as winner
Hobbes was murdered by Stupendous Man.
GERMAN TASTE DEGENERATES. In the German-language
panel Differences in Fandom, Perry Rhodan lost to Atlan!
-- the latter being a PR bit-player who now has his own spin-off
series....
Running Down
OVERHEARD: `How many Germans have you
tasted?' `Anyone who reports the death of Steve Green can't be
all bad.' `I refuse to play a round with two priests.'
`If I take 3 copies does it mean it's all true?'
`I'm looking for Kevin.' `Kevin who?' `Kevin with trousers.'
Pam Wells: `Isn't it sad when the snappiest dressers in fandom
are the soft toys?' `Nerds in SF are of a much higher quality.
Give me an SF nerd any day.' `You're one of the nicest nerds
I've ever run across, Chris [O'Shea].' `Who hasn't at
least once misread that sign in the lift as National Vulva?'
`And you've got to wade your way through all the alien
mutant spiky space-womble stuff.' Mike Ford: `Bernie Evans
scored a first at the Mexicon desk by selling something that doesn't
even exist!' Thog the Mighty: `What?' `Oh, I can't tell
you or everyone will want one....' `Sperm! -- I knew there
was something it reminded me of!' `A draft of artists?'
`An acquisition of publishers?' `A whinge of writers.'
`A spittoon of Heliograph staffers.'
TIME IN ADVANCE. 13 April Birthdays:
Mary Burns 1946, John Foyster 1941, Hank Stine 1945. Lovecraft's The
Case of Charles Dexter Ward closed 1928. 14 April:
James Branch Cabell 1879, Tom Monteleone 1946, Leland Sapiro 1924.
TURKEY BREASTS: A request for the subject matter
of the next reading elicited mutters of `Sex, sex, SEX.'
A bid for page 69 was accepted.
HO HO! `Sir, as an octogenarian I never cease
to be amazed at technological advances. Recently, in California, I saw
a large road sign reading, "Live horse racing by satellite".
Whatever next!' Times Letter
BEAR IN BOX SAVED -- TIGER AT RISK. Tom would
like to announce that he's put his bearhooks away forever (well, until
he's bored). However, he finds the newly elected Ruler of the Universe
curiously attractive....
RHODRI JAMES `would like to thank the people
who serenaded me after the Banquet last night. There wasn't a dry seat
at the table.'
BUNCH OF WILLIES. The Chocolate Shop's Mr Wonka
was thrilled by a group of filkers singing the specially composed `Dark
Chocolate and Alcohol' (apologies to Leslie Fish): `Dark chocolate
and alcohol / We don't care if the cities fall / If all we have in the
convention hall / Is dark chocolate and alcohol.' For the rest,
apply to L. Stratmann.
MASCETTI'S THREE LAWS of Helicon panels: (1)
You're on a panel you didn't know about. (2) If you thought you
were on a panel, you're chairing it. (3) If you're chairing a
panel, you don't know who's on it. (4) If you're asked on to
a panel at short notice, you don't know anything about the subject.
(5) There's at least one more law than you thought. Steve
Davies's Corollary: If you're chairing a panel, you didn't come.
John Dallman's Corollary: If you thought you knew who your panellists
were, one of them has become David Lally. Anon's Corollary. Any
panel containing Jack Cohen and Jon Cowie becomes a duologue.
LATE SPLASH! Kathy's Mum denies all! `I don't
even know what boppin' is!'
TECH RADIO CHAT: `Does the crew at the Lido
need any drinks?' `Yes, one white coffee no sugar, one Pepsi, and two
PP3 batteries'. Chris O'Shea
DERMOTISM: a subtle yet coherent political
philosophy based on the idea that all problems should be solved in such
a manner that they will not dare reappear, and with a maximum
of technological overkill.
FORTHCOMING OBIT: `I have a Complaint. Too
much chit-chat; not enough news.' Phil Rogers
NEWSROOM VOX POP. `Even Iain Banks doesn't
know why he crawled under that carpet....' `I want to complain!
You didn't credit my comment!' (Anon) `How do you spell
...?' `Don't ask Alex, for God's sake!' `I wouldn't recognize
Sally-Ann Melia if she crawled up my leg.' `These seem to be
the incredibly secret Intersection meeting minutes -- shall we run off
500 copies?' `Alex, would you like to crucify Chris for me?'
`Sure: where's the staple gun?' `See Ops.' Langford on Finns,
0500: `Differently intelligenced ... or is that differently nostrilled?'
CLOSING CEREMONY: `In terms of psychic energy,
darlin', you're as thick as a brick.' `Now John Brunner's head's
in the way of the side screen.' `I'm a table, I'm a coat-rack,
I'm a guide -- I'm whatever you need....' `Why Thog not in Heliograph
credits?'
ZOO CHARITY: we raised £1,000 over Helicon!
BRIDGET WILKINSON'S AT-A-GLANCE SUMMARY OF THE CLOSING
CEREMONY. See pp94-146.