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After growing up in the suburban Connecticut enclave of Ridgefield, Peter earned his bachelors degree in creative writing from Hamilton College. He returned to his hometown to work for two years as a reporter on the local newspaper, and later served as that paper's editor for one year. He joined West End Games in 1993 to establish The Official Star Wars Adventure Journal, a quarterly publication filled with original Star Wars fiction, source material, and adventures. Over the years he's worked with many New York Times best-selling Star Wars authors, including Timothy Zahn, Kathy Tyers, and Michael A. Stackpole. Peter also freelanced many West End products, including Platt's Starport Guide, the Raiders of the Lost Ark Sourcebook, Platt's Smuggler's Guide, and the Shadows of the Empire Sourcebook. He's contributed to numerous issues of the Star Wars Adventure Journal and Topps Star Wars Galaxy Magazine, Cracken's Rebel Operatives, the DarkStryder campaign, Instant Adventures, the Men in Black Roleplaying Game, the Hercules & Xena Roleplaying Game, and the Star Wars Roleplaying Game, Revised & Expanded. His Star Wars Introductory Adventure Game helped introduce new people to roleplaying during the height of the Star Wars Special Edition film release in early 1997. He's written a solitaire adventure game book, Imperial Double-Cross, and a small promotional game flyer called Mos Eisley Shoot-Out. Peter also edited two Bantam short story anthologies, Star Wars: Tales from the Empire and Star Wars: Tales from the New Republic. In 1999 he moved to Williamsburg, Virginia, where he continued his freelance work. His freelance endeavors have included writing material for Fantasy Flight Games' Dragonstar game line, Pinnacle Entertainment's Weird Wars, Wizards of the Coast's Star Wars Roleplaying Game and the late Star Wars Gamer, and Decipher's Star Trek Roleplaying Game. His short fiction pieces include "Forgotten" in Far Frontiers (DAW Books, September 2000) and "Hatshepsut's Revenge" in Historical Hauntings (DAW Books, March 2001). His bibliography contains a complete listing of his published work. He launched his personal website, Griffon's Aerie, in March 2003 to promote his freelance writing and game design activities. Although he still maintains this site, in October, 2005, he launched Griffon Publishing Studio, a sole proprietorship to publish his game ideas online in PDF format, with the long-term goal of offering them in print. On October 18, 2003, Peter married Lynanne Rollins, a film archivist trained at the Massachusetts College of Art and the L. Jeffrey Selznick School of Film Preservation at the George Eastman House. Lynanne has worked at National Geographic, the National Archives, and the Smithsonian Institution. She is currently a preservation specialist at the Library of Congress National Audio Visual Conservation Center in Culpeper, Virginia. Peter and Lynanne have two cats, the ever-regal Wolfgang with his large, polydactyl front paws, and Peggy Lee, the half-manx with a cute, hooked nub for a tail. (Yes, Wolfgang and Peggy Lee offered some inspiration bits for the Barathax from the D6: Space alien species supplement.) In 2007 the couple brougth two English Angora rabbits into their home, Lord Wolseley and Brunhilde, who provide fine angora fibers for Lynanne's spinning hobby. When he isn't toiling on writing or gaming projects, Peter spends far too much time reading mysteries, researching interesting historical periods (particularly ancient and Victorian Egypt, the Middle Ages, and World War II), dabbling with miniatures and dioramas for his games, and enjoying extra cheese pizza.
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"This is called a Griffin because it is a winged quadruped. This kind of wild animal is born in Hyperborean parts, or in mountains. All its bodily members are like a lion's, but its wings and mask are like an eagle's. It is vehemently hostile to horses. But it will also tear to pieces any human beings which it happens to come across." -- The Book of Beasts, translated
by T.H. White
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| Except where otherwise noted, all text material copyright 2003-2008 Peter Schweighofer. |