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Answering Your Questions About Reactor: Right here.
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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

Kate Mitchell, who is a very long way from here, says “I’d love to hear more about what actually goes on at cons. Because I’ve never actually been to one, and it’s always a little mystifying hearing about them (especially with all the bizarre, shortened names)”.

Actually, I had a few sweet sherries at Orbital, this year’s British National SF convention (Eastercon), and accosted people with obviously fake names demanding to know why they didn’t have their real name on their badge. Both Saxon Bullock and Bella Pagan explained to me patiently that these were their full real names, and Helenex explained how her badge name was straightforwardly derived from her full real name. At which point I retired embarrassed; if any of the three of you are reading this, yes, I was the clearly barmy woman and I’m sorry.

Meanwhile, a lot of people at cons use bizarre shortened names. I never have, and I don’t quite understand the impulse. People might want to discuss it in comments, though as I remember this came up from time to time in the Usenet group rec.arts.sf.fandom and always generated a massive flame war. Oh well, I’m sure Tor.com has a sound moderation policy and it probably needs testing.

The nice thing about questions like ‘what goes on at cons?’ is that they can be answered by reference to my favourite fannish artifact, the fanzine. The convention report, or conrep, is a long-standing staple of fanzines, and it’s been faithfully translated onto the internet. So you can find thousands of con reports from hundreds of cons by merely searching the web.

Let us take a specific example. Orbital, the aforementioned Eastercon, was excellent in many respects, and strikes me as being a model of what a largish British convention should be like. As a particular note in its favour, it’s gathered a couple of dozen con reports together, including reports by some of the guests, and a report by one of the girls who made the giant pig puppet. If you read a few of these, you will quickly discover that a convention of a thousand people or so provides many, many different answers to the question “What actually goes on at cons?” They also have a page designed to provide a little context for people who’ve never attended a con before. You can also look at pictures, but I find that pictures of cons put rather more emphasis on guests and costuming than most people’s experience of the con will involve.

I’ve written the odd con report from time to time; these days, my own experience of cons tends to revolve around finding somewhere comfortable with a supply of real ale, and settling into conversations with friends old and new.

For a glimpse into What Used to Go on at Conventions, I cannot do better than to recommend Peter Weston’s fanzine Prolapse. Yes, it’s very British. Americans might like to try Mimosa.

As for What Will Go On at Conventions in the Future, I have no idea.

About the Author

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Alison Scott

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I'm a British SF fan who co-edits a fanzine, Plokta. I also have a personal blog, Macadamia, where I write mostly about folk music and technology. My profile picture is currently the Cyberman pumpkin my children forced me to carve last Halloween. I was dead proud of it, but it's only here because I can't find a recent photo that doesn't show me covered in rather alarming Oysterband facepaint.
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