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Randy Richards, Gary Gygax
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Front Row: Frank Mentzer,
Gary Gygax, Dave Arneson.
Back Row: Anne Brown,
Randy Richards, Lisa Stevens.
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Randy Richards has been playing Dungeons and Dragons since
the late 70s, but started in earnest in the early 80s. "In the
1980s," Randy says, "we had the Basic D&D boxed game in our
Gifted & Talented class, and I used to play a Cajun halfling. The
other kids loved it, especially the accent."  Randy graduated from
Chalmette High School in 1984, then from college in 1989, and
moved to Tennessee.

Commenting on the decision to move, Randy says, "My family is
from Cades Cove in the Smoky Mountains. I just wanted to get
closer to my roots - not to mention its gorgeous up there - so I
moved to an area near Gatlinburg." The move proved to be
beneficial for Randy's career in photography. "People know me
for my writing," he says, "but they don't know my day job is
photography (
DanceBackwards.com). Olan Mills, which operates
out of Chattanooga, hired me to work for them as a kids
photographer, then a glamour photographer, and finally a church
directory photographer."

After five years in Tennessee, Randy was transferred to Baton
Rouge, Louisiana, and started a family. "This is when I first got
published. I wrote "Dark Magic in New Orleans" for Dungeon
Magazine. After receiving scores of complimentary letters from
people all over the world, I decided to start writing on a regular
basis. With all my traveling with work there really wasn't time,
but while driving I would make notes on anything available:
cardboard boxes, gum wrappers, paper cups -- anything!"

In the late 90s Randy hosted a series of Gen Con events, one of
which included the co-creators of D&D, Gary Gygax and Dave
Arneson, and other big names including Frank Mentzer, Lisa
Stevens (now CEO of Paizo Publishing), and Anne Brown. "This
got my name known in the industry, although at the time that
wasn't my goal.  I was just trying to have fun and spread the joy
of gaming."
A few years passed before Randy got the idea to write a book. "My daughter was getting older, and I wanted to have more time for
her, so I decided to start my own photography business. The icing on the cake is that I had more time available for writing. I would
copy the scrap notes down when I got home, and as I was reading through them I realized they started to form a swamp theme.  
Thats when I started writing Dreadmire, although back then the working title was Soggy Bottoms, then it morphed to Deadmire
("dead" not "dread"), then Sinking Forest, then Monster Swamp, and finally Dreadmire. All of these names were already in the
book (various factions have their own name for the swamp), including Dreadmire, I just couldn't decide which one to use. In the
end we did some polling and discovered the Dreadmire name had the preferred euphony, so thats the one we decided to go with.

There were some false starts and delays before Dreadmire came to print. "First I submitted it to Necromancer Games, but we had
creative differences and parted ways. That very same day I was contacted by Spellbinder Games. Their book store was in the
same building as a dance school I photograph. So they knew of me beyond what they had seen at Gen Con, Dragon*Con,
CoastCon, and Crescent City Con, or read in Dungeon. They faxed me a proposal and I signed right away. They gave me a lot of
control over the project. After my other experiences that was very important to me."

And the rest, as they say, is history.