D. C. Frandsen Jr wrote:
Thanks to all those who have said Hi!
I have been a lurker for awhile but have decided it is time to jump into the online world with both feet. Though time may restrict how often I post.

I am 58 yrs old. I have 5 kids( two of my own, two of my wife's and an unofficial adopted daughter) between them we have 5 grandchildren. I am a West Point grad and a Pepperdine MBA living in Austin, TX. Well South Austin anyway, down here in Bubaland we wonder if the City Council really knows we are incorporated. We presently own a parent teacher store called Teachers' Alley.

Just looked it up on Yahoo, and yikes! that's a bit of a haul from me -- but if someone's asking after a teaching supply store and they're in that part of town, I will definitely tell them to check it out. (I have twins and belong to Austin Mothers of Multiples, and that's the sort of thing that comes up now and again.)

Bubbaland sounds nice some days.  :)

Just like you Rob the first science fiction book that I read was Tom Swift jr and the Flying Hydrocopter. It was given to me by the next door neighbor who was an Army helicopter pilot. I believe I was in 4th grade and a very poor reader at the time. After that book I was hooked on reading. I read all the Sci Fi books in the school library by the end of 5th grade. I believe that Asimov, Clarke and Heinlein in a very really way influenced my way of groking the world. In the 90's it was the three B's when I had time.

The first SF I can remember was Asimov's _The Best New Thing_ which we checked out of the library repeatedly. My father figured out the best way to hook me in my pre-teen years was stuff like Andre Norton and Anne McCaffrey (the first book with a cover price over $2.50 that I bought with my own money was _Crystal Singer_), and then encouraged me to read the harder stuff. :) I like space opera a lot, if it's well done, and harder SF. Not much patience with fantasy anymore, although I've had some *good* stuff recommended in the last few years, so I'm at least willing to try it.

Benford's Deep Time made a very lasting impression on me and I would never have read it if it had not been for his fiction books. I believe that many of our country's problems today stem from the lack of long term thinking. This brought me to the Long Now foundation and the podcasts of its seminars and David Brin's talk there. and that led me to his blog and this group. I look forward to our conversations.

have a great day!
Chris Frandsen

It's nice having you here!

        Julia
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