Difference between revisions of "Jeff Boman"

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His first major publication was in the role-playing game field. In 1995, he published the adventure/sourcebook "Crashpoint" for DreamPod 9 (then called Ianus Games).  
 
His first major publication was in the role-playing game field. In 1995, he published the adventure/sourcebook "Crashpoint" for DreamPod 9 (then called Ianus Games).  
  
Starting in 1996 he began to write reviews and columns for fps: The Magazine of Animation (fps stands for frames per second, an animation term) and still does today. He also has written for the now-defunt publication RPG Gazette and the also long-defunct Web site RPG Action.  
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Starting in 1996 he began to write reviews and columns for fps: The Magazine of Animation (fps stands for frames per second, an animation term) and still does today. He also has written for the now-defunct publication RPG Gazette and the also long-defunct Web site RPG Action.  
  
In 2005, he was involved in three charity benefit e-books (one for the tsunami of 2004, two for the Hurricane Katrina disaster}, has written "Hunters Inc.", a sourcebook e-book for Cracked Mirror Publications (a second edition is slated to come out in 2006), and since 2002 he has been a victorious 1-month novelist with NaNoWriMo (the National Novel Writers Month, held each November). He also regularly submits short stories to various science fiction anthologies and magazines--so far unpublished--and he is involved in a few other zines.
+
In 2005, he was involved in three charity benefit e-books (two for the tsunami of 2004, one for the Hurricane Katrina disaster}, has written "Hunters Inc.", a sourcebook e-book for Cracked Mirror Publications (a second edition is slated to come out in 2006), and since 2002 he has been a victorious 1-month novelist with NaNoWriMo (the National Novel Writers Month, held each November). He also regularly submits short stories to various science fiction anthologies and magazines--so far unpublished--and he is involved in a few other zines.
  
 
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<!--NOTES TO EDITORS: some good examples of ZineWiki style in here. For the record, magazine titles are in plain text, book titles in quotation marks. For readability, simply uppercase the first letters of proper names (like publishing houses or Web sites) rather than setting them apart with emphases. Thanks much, admin Kate (kateeliza@gmail.com with questions. Also, didn't think it would come up much, but it seems to crop up more and more. Our style for RPGs is "role-playing games" as roleplaying is not a dictionary term. I know it's not gamer standard, but it's Webster's New World standard ;)-->

Revision as of 02:36, 4 September 2007

Jeffrey Allan Boman founded the Comicopia APA in 1990 when he'd just finished University while still sharing an apartment with his University roommate. He created it along with interest from Ivan Raketik at a local comic-book store called Komico. Mike Aragona was also a founding member, and in the late 1990s Jeff passed the distribution manager torch to him, and Comicopia thrived. Jeffrey left Comicopia in June 2007 to create a new zine, The Original Universe.


Biography

Jeff was born in May 1967 in Montreal, Quebec. He discovered comics when he was 14. He ultimately ended up graduating from Concordia University in 1990 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Animation, having specifically focused on the screenwriting aspect.

That September, he co-founded Comicopia, and is still a contributing member, with his newsletter The Old Detective's Watering Hole published in 100issues.

The founding of Comicopia was approximately 6 months after Jeff became a founding member of Mordred, an RPG APA in Montreal. Said APA lasted only 18 issues. He was also a founding member of APAcalypse, the APA that grew out of Mordred.

When it began, Jeff contributed to 4 APAs the same week! The three named above, plus Rogues Gallery, a Texas-based HERO Games APA then run by author Aaron Allston. A year later Jeff left that one.

His life underwent a change in 1996 when he became a 'lucky recipient' of Multiple Sclerosis. It impacted his abilities to sing and dance, and around 1998 he stepped down as the figurehead distribution manager for Comicopia, relinquishing the title to Mike Aragona, who had been fulfilling the duties of the position for years. Jeff's passion for writing endured and still does to this day.

In 2007, Jeff left Comicopia. He's producing his own comicbook fanzine now, The Original Universe.

Publications

His first major publication was in the role-playing game field. In 1995, he published the adventure/sourcebook "Crashpoint" for DreamPod 9 (then called Ianus Games).

Starting in 1996 he began to write reviews and columns for fps: The Magazine of Animation (fps stands for frames per second, an animation term) and still does today. He also has written for the now-defunct publication RPG Gazette and the also long-defunct Web site RPG Action.

In 2005, he was involved in three charity benefit e-books (two for the tsunami of 2004, one for the Hurricane Katrina disaster}, has written "Hunters Inc.", a sourcebook e-book for Cracked Mirror Publications (a second edition is slated to come out in 2006), and since 2002 he has been a victorious 1-month novelist with NaNoWriMo (the National Novel Writers Month, held each November). He also regularly submits short stories to various science fiction anthologies and magazines--so far unpublished--and he is involved in a few other zines.


Bibliography

Reviews

Articles

RPG Stuff

Zines

Other