![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi6X64P26XYxrl0onE55X5hZF6XioTRkANwlthF1BD-XaqHwFMyy6kfKL5-NkBdUhxl2w8oEG1et0Eg5GhpKwDeqBUzpYMN4KZkRmxCXCz5xCUe6srYMb0mHiKXS3y_4COf5YJY/s1600/Bouchercon+XI003.jpg)
Look at the guest list first. There are familiar names there, and some of the people represented are no longer among us. I miss them all. The good news is that a lot of them are still around. A little older, perhaps. Okay, a lot older. But still here and still going to Bouchercon.
Then look at the program. Yes, that's all of it, right there on two uncrowded pages. In those days, it was easy to go to everything on the program, and I'm pretty sure I did.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEib-sThjemUNFt_YZHIktAa35wt77eoO0r6AvwSpaAKBlBh3biT_6d4YgDEemB1oh5KMYHZZUq6HQkXExM6IJbspMNBtU0jkfthTr7C8AK1MFDrkKZgNRmpqgcDOH_gn9_UMQXJ/s1600/Bouchercon+XI004.jpg)
And then there was that great trip to the bookstore in a station wagon piloted by Art Scott. What was the name of that place? Chaos Unlimited? I remember finding Roughneck by Jim Thompson there, and a second printing of John D. MacDonald's Weep for Me. Probably paid a quarter for them. On the way back to the convention we were treated to a dramatic reading of selected passages from Michael Avallone's The Bouncing Betty by the inimitable John Nimienski. I miss the old days.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcH_9n_LE9-zcnCNai-gTFc_zv6CG5fM3GJLe_VswBAIT0xaE95Z3KVtUAnN5dau-9LKttvYqoJ4WbshesrF5RTKBYlKpUjJkTqgwE_FojadvCj7O8AIqnU-dBlEl11RB3dGAw/s1600/Bouchercon+XI006.jpg)
6 comments:
Yes, Chaos Unltd. - Nelson Freck's store. I remember going down to the basement - you had to really duck your head. It was our third Bouchercon and one of the more memorable,
Stay off our lawns!
Jeff
It was in the basement that I found the good stuff.
Ah yes. And we met for the first time at the bar on the roof of the hotel. You ordered a gin and tonic (which struck me at the time as pretty radical for a guy teaching at a Baptist college in Brownwood, Texas). At Chaos, didn't you find one or two of Daoma Winston's early Beacons - Runaway Blonde or The Woman he Wanted? She signed them for you, as I recall.
A.S.
Your memory doesn't fail you. I got The Woman He Wanted and The Other Stranger. She was irate when I showed them to her, thinking that someone had reprinted them. She, being a respectable novelist at that time, didn't want to see them. But she finally signed them, angrily cracking the brittle spines on both of them.
I remember going to that store with Gregory Macdonald and a bunch of others, hanging out with Bill DeAndrea, and Ann Byerly. Wooster's Windex cocktail. Dinner with Dorothy. It was a great con because it was small and served Bouchercon's original purpose--for fan and pros to mingle. Nowadays it's a stampede of cozy writers to tackle editors and the fans be damned.
Wow, hard to remember a con with single track programming.
Post a Comment