This is the blog. Click here to go to the Zenopus Archives website.

Note: Many older posts on this blog are missing images, but can be viewed at the corresponding page in the Internet Archive

FEATURED POST

The Forgotten Smugglers' Cave: Index of Posts

An index of posts describing the Forgotten Smugglers' Cave, an adventure for Holmes Basic characters levels 2-4.                    ...

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Lee Gold: 45 Years of Alarums & Excursions!


Alarums & Excursions #1, June 1975. Source: RPG Geek


As of this month, Lee Gold has been publishing the APAzine Alarums & Excursions for 45 years! During this time she has missed only a few months, which means that this month's issue is a jaw-dropping #535, pethe RPG Geek page. Lee not only assembles every issue, she also contributes her own column Tantivy:



Lee Gold's Tantivy from A&E #1. Source: RPG Geek

A lengthy 2019 audio interview with Lee can be found here on YouTube, and follow the link at the bottom of this page to read a new profile of Lee over at the DM David blog.

A little more on A&E: it's an APAzine (Amateur Press Association zine), which means that it is assembled from contributions from various subscribers. When it started in the '70s, it was the closest thing to what we would now recognize as an internet forum for D&D discussion, with content and comments going back and forth between contributors. Issues are dense with content, ideas and discussion and can be over a hundred pages in length. This is where J. Eric Holmes got his start writing D&D articles, along with many other RPG designers of the '70s, '80s and beyond, which DM David covers.

You can subscribe to, contribute to, or buy pdfs of back issues of A&E here at Lee's site. I own the first 29 issues in pdf, and if you are interested in the early history of D&D and RPGs they are well worth the money. I also own one copy in paper, issue #30:



Alarums & Excursions #30, January 1978 with cover art by Troy Hughes

Meet the Woman Who by 1976 Was the Most Important Gamer in Roleplaying After Gary

In 1976, after Dungeons & Dragons co-creator Gary Gygax, the most important person in roleplaying games was a Los Angeles woman named Lee Gold. She still contributes to the hobby and still runs a campaign using her Lands of Adventure (1983) game. Lee who? And what happened to Gary's co-designer Dave Arneson?

5 comments:

  1. So cool - now I feel that I must contribute an article!

    Will definitely purchase some pdfs. Is there an index, available?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A scholar-saint has done the good work at RPGGeek:

      https://rpggeek.com/rpgperiodical/1494/alarums-excursions

      Delete
  2. Thanks for posting about Lee Gold and linking DM David's article! I had no idea who she was, and she sounds like a very cool person. Thanks to both you, Z., and David for the links.

    I have just enjoyed her essay "Golems & Gematria":
    https://conchord.org/xeno/golems.html

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're welcome. Lee's fab. I had a brief stint as a member of the APA from issue 500 on. I keep meaning to return for "one more issue" but other stuff keeps getting in the way.

      Delete
    2. Karel: I've just realized this week that she is less well known than I had thought. I've known of her work since the '80s, when I had the Best of Dragon #1 that reprinted her article "Languages, or Could you repeat that in Auld Wormish?" from Dragon #1. It mentioned there that she was the editor of "Alarums & Excursions". I remember thinking: "Is that some other D&D magazine I've never heard of? I want it!", but I had no ability to track it down back then.

      Delete