Cred Contributors

Thomas A. Bass has written a new book Vietnamerica: The War Comes Home. The Web site is at www.vietnamerica.com. Shoshana Berger (sushisho@well.com) looks at dirty pictures on the Net and writes for SF Weekly, Raygun, Bikini, huH, Cups, The Annex, and HotWired. Caleb John Clark works at Woolward & Partners advertising. He thinks it's easy […]

Thomas A. Bass has written a new book Vietnamerica: The War Comes Home. The Web site is at www.vietnamerica.com.

Shoshana Berger (sushisho@well.com) looks at dirty pictures on the Net and writes for SF Weekly, Raygun, Bikini, huH, Cups, The Annex, and HotWired.

Caleb John Clark works at Woolward & Partners advertising. He thinks it's easy to seem very rich; one just has to pretend to be slightly annoyed all the time.

Dave Clifford (cliffoda@ucsu.colorado.edu) descends from a long line of brain-eating apes. He has yet to understand why people give high fives.

Simson Garfinkel (simsong@mit.edu) lives on Martha's Vineyard in a 150 year-old house with his wife and three cats.

Steve Glaser writes on science, business communications, and humor. His unfinished novella, How to Live Better than a Rich Lady's Cat, won the Nobel Prize for Literature in an alternate dimension.

Alastair Johnston is a letterpress printer and a teacher of graphic design who broadcasts over the San Francisco airwaves as Dr. Rhythm.

Richard Kadrey (kadrey@well.com)M is the author of the Covert Culture Sourcebook and two novels: Metrophage and Kamikaze L'Amour. He has no qualifications for anything he does.

Hari Kunzru (hari@wired.co.uk) does something quite important, though nobody is sure what. Mostly, he plays loud techno music in the offices of Wired UK.

Andrew Leonard (aleonard@well.sf.ca.us) is a freelance writer based in Berkeley, California. He specializes in cyber-Asia.

Elizabeth Lewis (lizabeth@well.com) writes about life online. She remembers when Xmodem was really cool.

Chris Nickson (73633.1471@compuserve.com) was born in England and now lives in Seattle. Please have pity on him.

Tim Nott (timn@cix.compulink.co.uk) writes about computers for a living. To compensate for this, he lives in the Lot ­ the department, not the river.

Tamara Palmer (trance@netcom.com) contributes to several publications, including Option, URB, and LA Weekly. She is working on a children's book about music.

Matthias Penzel is a freelance writer. For a while, he edited the German version of the heavy-metal magazine Kerrang! He is working on a book about London.

j. poet (poebeat@aol.com) is a world-music maven who loves hot music, tropical climates and spicy food. He has contributed to the forthcoming Trouser Press Guide to the '90s.

Paul Semel (beerhound@aol.com) works as the reviews editor for huH magazine and frequently contributes to Ray Gun, Bikini, Option, HotWired, and some small press poetry journals.

Marc Spiegler entertains himself by boxing, ingesting magazines, and blading through Chicago traffic.

Dean Suzuki teaches music history at San Francisco State University, with an emphasis on 20th-century music and rock history.

Scott Taves (staves@interaccess.com) is the US manager of B&W Music and The Blue Room record labels and author of Pocket Tour of Games on the Internet.

Rogier van Bakel (rogiernl@aol.com), as anagram enthusiasts will note, has Brave Ink Galore. He lives in Connecticut.

Have something you'd like to review? Send your queries and submissions to streetcred@wired.com.

STREET CRED
Striking a NerveThe End of Science

The Joy of Chaos

Let Your Fingers Do the Web Walking

This Space for Rent

Mech Animal

A Forward Look at History

Chinese Son

InfoGenie

Painting with Music

Art and Invention

Salt-Water Rivers

Keko Mask

Blackjack for Serious Players

The Big Sleep

Drag Queen

Watch Your Back

Paintastic!

The City of Lost Dreams

Cred Contributors