[T]he alien powers in Cosmic Encounter mean unequal encounters, which require invention to tackle – convincing other players to ally with you when you're up against a tricksy alien like the sorcerer (who can chose to switch his played encounter card with the one you played) is tough. It might require promises of future cooperation, or a commitment to make a favourable exchange the next time the chance arises. Either could be an outright lie, of course. But whether promises made are sincere or not, they come about because an imbalance in power means they must.
• In mid-July 2012, U.S. publisher Mayfair Games announced that Alliance Game Distributors would now be its exclusive distributor for the hobby market. Someone at Black Diamond Games, a retail shop in Concord, California, explains how this move will affect his bottom line:
It means if you don't have Alliance as your primary distributor, you're losing money on these exclusives, which for me is 22% of my board games. It's a different amount for each game store, but I figure I would lose about $1,000 a year in added "cost of goods" costs. I don't know about you, but when my bills go up $83/month, I tend to howl a bit.
• Given all the recent hoo-hah over which games have won (and have not won) which awards, I thought I'd point out two articles on The New Yorker blog by author Michael Cunningham, one of three jury members for the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. In the end, after considering the three nominees, the 18 members of the Pulitzer Prize Board announced that no winner would be named. As quoted in the Los Angeles Times, Sig Gissler, administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes, said, "The three books were fully considered, but in the end, none mustered the mandatory majority for granting a prize, so no prize was awarded. This is the 11th time this has happened in the fiction category; the last time was 1977. It's unusual, but it does occur."
Cunningham's articles cover the selection of the nominees from the three hundred novels and short story collections sent to the jury members and the possibly fruitless and always contentious question of whether you can identify greatness when it appears, something he describes as "an attempt to appreciate an entire train while you're a passenger in one of its cars". An excerpt from the second article:
This ongoing state of agitation was not helped by the knowledge that a great new book, more or less by definition, doesn't much resemble the great books of the past. Nor was it helped by my suspicion that many of the long-forgotten critics and prize-givers who decimated Moby-Dick or ignored The Sound and the Fury failed to understand that the future wouldn't mind Melville's insistence on all those longish chapters devoted to whaling arcana, or Faulkner's devotion to a lexicon that could seem simultaneously oracular and impenetrable, that sometimes barely resembled the English most of us had spoken, with relative confidence, since childhood...
Finally, there was the question of shifting sensibilities. When Maureen, Susan, and I talked Big Book, we were thinking almost literally – a book that was, if not over five hundred pages long, vast in its scope, enormous in its concerns.
But as I scanned the cartons for Big Ones, I found myself thinking more and more of the Impressionists. I wondered over the fact that, in the course of several centuries, "serious" painting ceased to favor great historical or religious subjects, which tended to incorporate at least two dozen figures, facial and bodily expressions that ranged from despair to ecstasy, a landscape, a horse or two, symbolic vestments, symbolic gestures, and (optional, but recommended) various saints and angels, approving or angered, up among the roil and brilliance of the clouds.
And then, a mere minute later in historical time, a "serious" painting could be a Monet haystack. It could be a Cezanne portrait of a local farmer in overalls. It could be an empty Van Gogh field under an empty sky.
The Impressionists don't strike us (don't strike me, anyway) as lesser artists simply because they worked on an outwardly more modest scale. At the Metropolitan Museum of Art, do I hurry past the paintings by Monet and Cezanne and Van Gogh to get to those by Tintoretto and the Delacoix? I do not. I'm happy to see all of them, but the Monets and Cezannes and Van Goghs don't look small compared to the Tintorettos and Delacroixes. They're just big in different ways.