
I'm going to take this opportunity to tell you all I wasn't that into
Dungeons & Dragons. My friends and I preferred the more freeform flow
of the Tunnels & Trolls system. Some of you reading this probably think
I made T&T up. Some of you know better. I started an RPG club in my
high school and I was Treasurer of Science Fiction Club in college and I
founded my university's Strategic Games Club which was a school-funded
excuse for LARPing and shooting each other with ingeniously modified
water guns.
I always used to go to town with my costuming. Anything from a school
spirit theme day to a science fiction con to of course Halloween was all
the reason I needed to put on extreme and barely street legal clothing.
The thing I loved most about both RPGs and costuming was the way they

allowed me to explore who I wanted to be before I had to commit. I
remember the first Halloween where I dressed up and went into Georgetown
to celebrate with friends and it was okay but nothing special. In a
way, I was disappointed. In a way, I was thrilled that I was finally
who I wanted to be 24/7/365. I got to be me all the time and not just
for special occasions.
Blue Blood contributors have been guests and panelists and exhibitors at
every important SF/fantasy convention in the U.S. and many abroad.
Shariann Lewitt, one of the first women to write hard SF, contributed
fiction to the very first issue of Blue Blood in print.
I will always have a soft spot for armor and swords and sleek black
business suits and implausible weapons and the Mad Max/Tank Girl stuff
which falls in between. One of my favorite cinematic love scenes is the
opener for Excalibur. William Gibson remains the only celebrity I have
ever choked upon meeting.
--Amelia G, Los Angeles