Earlier this week, I mentioned the addition of the MMORPG Sword of the New World to my writing slate for 2007, in addition to my comics and other creative work. There are only so many hours in the day, however — and last week, I announced my that I would be leaving F&W Publications in order to contribute the bulk of my time to my creative projects. My final day in the office is Tuesday.
There are definite mixed emotions. I was editing a line of lumber trade magazines more than 13 years ago when the opportunity arose to join what was then Krause Publications as the editor of Comics Retailer magazine, working with my fandom idols Don and Maggie Thompson. Since then, I've had the opportunity to reinvent my job several times. I was able to incorporate my interest in games into the magazine, which later became known as Comics & Games Retailer. I worked increasingly with Maggie on Comics Buyers' Guide after Don's passing in 1994, serving intermittently as a columnist and becoming the magazine's managing editor in 1998.
In 1999, I was involved in the purchase of the game magazine Scrye and became its first editor at Krause. I became editorial director of the resultant Comics & Games Division in 2001, leaving the day-to-day magazine work to focus on launching book lines (including the Standard Catalog of Comic Books and the Scrye CCG Checklist & Price Guide) and, most challengingly, transforming Comics Buyer's Guide from a weekly newspaper to a monthly magazine in 2004. More recently, my work has focused on the Internet. I became editorial director for the whole collectible category in 2005 during which we rolled out CBGXtra.com, and since last year I've been editorial director for interactive media, working with dozens of websites and e-mail newsletters and their editors, ranging from Log & Timber Homes to Tuff Stuff. I've learned a great deal in my time there — about comics and games, of course, but also about publishing and the internet —and I hope to incorporate some of that knowledge into my future print and online projects.
My CBG column, "Longbox Manifesto," is continuing — and I expect to show up a little more frequently now at CBGXtra now that I don't have 48 other websites to look in on. Comics circulation history remains a major interest of mine, and I will continue to generate my monthly sales analysis.
So I'm no longer moonlighting — although that doesn't mean I won't be working into the night to get ahead on my ongoing projects like Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic — and the new creative projects which this change has already enabled me to take on. It's a good thing — keep an eye on my site for announcements!
Anyway. "Brave new world" and all that. I've treasured all the friendships I've made over the years, both within the company and without — and between conventions and such I expect see as much of if not more of everyone in the future.
Now, I've got to get back to writing ... or — he says late on a Saturday evening — to my "day" job!