Comics
Lunch
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From
left: (back row) Charles Ryan, Andy Collins, Stan!,
Marc Schmalz, Ed Stark, Rich Redman, Chris Perkins;
(front row) JD Wiker, Monte Cook
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It
all started right after we moved to Washington. See, when
Wizards of the Coast bought TSR, it was weird in that,
while we all moved across the country to a brand new city,
we all moved to this new city. So even though everything
was strange and new, practically all of my friends (with
some notable exceptions) were still with me.
And
we all needed to figure out where to buy comic books now.
Soon
after our arrival, Jeff
Quick -- then editor of Polyhedron
-- and I -- then Wizards game designer -- found a little
shop called the Comics Den right here in Seattle (or actually,
in our adjacent town/suburb, Renton). New comics came
in on Wednesdays.
Very
quickly, a tradition started. We would go get comics on
Wednesdays, and then have lunch. But we weren't the only
comics fans in the Wizards' offices. Editor Michele
Carter, writer Stan!,
and many others were comics fans, too. If new comics fans
joined the company or our department, like designer/editors
Andy
Collins and Erik
Mona, many of them joined comics lunch as well.
The
tradition went on and on. Every Wednesday. Eventually,
even people who didn't read comics learned not to ask
us what we were doing for lunch on Wednesdays. "Oh,
that's right," they'd say. "It's Wednesday.
Comics lunch."
Now
one of the many strange things about this tradition was
that we didn't really talk about comics at comics lunch.
We'd talk about books, or movies, or TV, or -- most often
-- work. Very often, we'd complain about work. Comics
lunch became a time for us to get out of the office and
vent steam if anything was bugging us. We'd call these
discussions "surl," which actually comes from
an old joke regarding former TSR game designer Colin McComb,
whom we jokingly referred to as "Surly." (This
comes from a Simpsons character... it doesn't matter....)
We'd say, "Who has 'surl' today?"
At
its height, we'd have 10 to 12 people at comics lunch.
Eventually, people uninterested in comics would attend
too, just for the lunch. Like I said, we didn't talk about
comics at lunch for the most part -- you didn't need to
be a comics fan to enjoy it.
But
then I left the company. A month later, so did Jeff. Then
there was a round of layoffs at Wizards. Then another.
And another. Comics lunch attendees took their share of
hits during these layoffs. The strange thing is, though,
comics lunch didn't suffer for this. Just the opposite:
It took on a whole new meaning.
Now
the majority of people who attend do so because it's the
only connection many of us have with each other during
the week. No one deals in "surl" anymore. Now
we spend the time catching up with all the people we otherwise
wouldn't have seen.
It's
funny how things change, and how something that started
out as just a weekly lunch date actually became pretty
important.