Oh no. I knew he had that massive health issue a couple years back that left him paralyzed, but hadn’t heard that he was in dire straits again.
I loved his writing, especially on JRPGs. ;(
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Oh no. I knew he had that massive health issue a couple years back that left him paralyzed, but hadn’t heard that he was in dire straits again.
As our Editor-In-Chief documented in an April post filled with comments I cannot read without tearing up, on March 22 I experienced an aortic dissection, a relatively rare injury in which the aortic wall splits, allowing blood to go where it shouldn’t. It’s caused by high blood pressure (which I am taking care of now), smoking (which I’ve quit) and genetics. It’s the same thing that killed my biological father 20 years ago. It could very well have killed me, but I still function. Complications from the event have left me paralyzed from the chest down, but I have an awesome electric wheelchair and have started financing a special ramp-equipped van. I like to pretend my transforming cog has been lost and I am stuck in vehicle mode.
I was wondering why I hadn't seen a news story from him for awhile. He was one of the best things about the site, always full of enthusiasm. I'd been thinking about him lately and wishing we would see something new from him, wondering why he'd disappeared. Ironically enough, I don't see anything about his passing on the site itself.
I’m sure the corporate overlords ran revenue projections and decided that an article acknowledging the death of a beloved long-time contributor wouldn’t generate enough clicks to be bring in profitable ad revenue. So they’ll just skip it.
Yes, at one point he added lots of culture/food articles and perspectives on living overseas. I always thought that was an interesting way to connect more to gaming culture. I remember quite well when he had his original medical episode and just assumed he was more focused on day-to-day existence at this point. Not the news I was expecting to see this morning and I'm also surprised (or maybe not) that it's nowhere to be seen on Kotaku.Rumpy wrote: ↑Sun Sep 04, 2022 1:32 pm I was wondering why I hadn't seen a news story from him for awhile. He was one of the best things about the site, always full of enthusiasm. I'd been thinking about him lately and wishing we would see something new from him, wondering why he'd disappeared. Ironically enough, I don't see anything about his passing on the site itself.
Well, which is very odd considering they do plenty of welcome to the staff articles where new writers introduce themselves, as well as articles where longtime staff writers get acknowledged in farewell articles with other staff members gushing about them. So, if they feel those would generate enough revenue clicks, then surely the passing of one of their iconic writers should as well. Totilo got a farewell article, so did Jason Schreier and other less important writers that have come and gone. Yet Fahey stayed on and guarded the fort at a time when there was lots of turnover. He was one of the last of a long-time crew that really made the site what it is. In that context, it feels quite odd to omit.Skinypupy wrote: ↑Sun Sep 04, 2022 1:55 pmI’m sure the corporate overlords ran revenue projections and decided that an article acknowledging the death of a beloved long-time contributor wouldn’t generate enough clicks to be bring in profitable ad revenue. So they’ll just skip it.
(/s, although that does kinda feel like Kotaku’s MO these days)
Yeah, I'm totally Canadian...
In a 2002 interview with Minzesheimer, Straub said he resented "being stuffed into the category of genre writer . . . as if genre writing is automatically second-rate and can become literary only by transcending the genre," and wished critics would judge writers by the quality of the writing, not just their subject matter.
Straub was a reliable presence on the USA TODAY Best Selling Books list, with seven of his novels spending 68 weeks on the list. His highest-ranked book was "Black House," which went as high as No. 2 in 2001.
Emma Straub wrote warmly of her relationship with her father, which inspired her most recent book, "This Time Tomorrow," a big-hearted time-travel novel about a woman coming to terms with her writer father's impending death.
RIP“A universe of worlds, a dimensional macrocosm of worlds—and in all of them one thing that was always the same; one unifying force that was undeniably good, even if it now happened to be imprisoned in an evil place; the Talisman, axle of all possible worlds.”
It's notable that Lizzy refused to retire to let Chucky take over when he was a much younger man.
If the job is to be a figurehead who inspires national pride and continuity, she did a wonderful job of it. She was beloved and had no reason to abdicate.
I thought their role was to be a financial burden on the government?
Perhaps so! All I know is we fought 2 wars for the right to not give two fucks about the lot of them.
Well, fuck, I guess I fail that part of the patriotism exam.