Congratulations to you and to Casey. You can tell yourself that she would have done it
without your computer...and always wonder.
I'll look and maybe give a review.
But we always love to see new talent among the young.
Vern Wright
--- On Mon, 3/23/09, Anthony L. Eros <tony.eros at machm.org> wrote:
From: Anthony L. Eros <tony.eros at machm.org>
Subject: Vintage computing, relativity, and an obligatory parent brag
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at
classiccmp.org>
Date: Monday, March 23, 2009, 4:34 PM
Much to my wife's chagrin, I've been collecting
vintage computers since 1986, when a PDP-8/e and an ASR-33
started me thinking that it would be neat to have one of
every computer for which I'd ever written code. I did
nearly reach that goal, lacking only a System/370, though I
do have a Hercules emulator.
When my oldest daughter Casey was in middle school, her
interest in writing led her to ask me for a computer to use.
I tried interesting her in one of my vintage systems. I
figured OS/8 or RSTS/E would be overkill, so my PDP-8 and
the -11s were out. I thought I'd start small.
"How about this DECmate?", I asked.
"Eeeeeww! I'd really like a laptop, Daddy!!".
Okay...
My Hyperion was also a non-starter, as was the Mac SE, even
though I'd taken it on several cross-country trips and
had a nifty travel case for it. A Bondwell (my first
"laptop") didn't even make it out of its bag.
Finally, she reluctantly agreed to use a "really old
system" - a DEC HiNote Ultra: 75 Mhz 486 running
Windows 95. I guess her definition of vintage computing is
a lot different than mine... In truth though, she really
was grateful to have the use of any computer at all.
In February, writing under the pseudonym "Marian
Watson", Casey submitted her novel, The House of
Autumn, to Amazon's annual Breakthrough Novel Award
competition. Her submission was one of 10,000 entries.
After reading each of the entries, Amazon cut the field by
95%. Last week, Casey got the word that she made the cut
and is one of the quarterfinalists!
Amazon is providing free downloads of excerpts of the
quarterfinalist entries and encouraging the public to read
and post their own reviews. Since it's my job as a
parent to brag on my kids' accomplishments, I feel
compelled to pass along a pointer to Casey's excerpt:
http://www.amazon.com/House-Autumn-Amazon-Breakthrough-Novel/dp/B001UG3C80/…
In the upper right-hand corner of the screen is a
"Download for free" button that you can click to
get the excerpt.
If you get a chance, give Casey's novel excerpt a read
and post a review - it's pretty good. I'd like it
even if it wasn't written by my daughter!!
-- Tony Eros