Popular Culture Review Vol. 22, No. 1, Winter 2011 | Page 8

Popular Culture Review job, I’ve been taking on more and more responsibilities, eventually becoming a medical database manager and head of our IT department (albeit a department of one). I’ve always been a tech geek, but I finally took the next major step and built my own computer. Along the way I also discovered that I have gluten intolerance which severely damaged my health for a time; because of that. I’m also on my way to taking a more active role in the Celiac Disease community. Amie has been equally busy. Since she started with PC/?, she has had three children (aged 6, 4, and 8 months); while pregnant with her first, she was also taking care of two of her nephews. She became a volunteer lactation counselor and became intensely involved in the local pregnancy/birthing community, helping the current generation of mothers rediscover the birthing and mothering skills of their great-grandmothers’ generation. I remember very well when Amie and I first started working on PCR back in October 2003: we received a Word document of the previous issue . . . and that’s it: no templates, no style sheet, no instructions of any kind. Previously the printer had done all the formatting, but we were determined to bring PCR into the digital age. Suddenly we had articles to edit, a template to create, and a deadline. That first issue was a bit of a struggle, but now articles are transferred via the net (no more submissions via paper or disks! Yes, disks. . . remember those?), and PCR even has a web presence now. In addition, the entirety of the circulation list was kept on a disk in a program so ancient, no one had a copy of the software: I had to start rebuilding the database from scratch. It’s now kept in an Excel file and backed up on three hard drives (along with each edition of PCR from the Winter 2004 issue onward). Meanwhile, to satisfy my own curiosity, I collected all back issues of the journal and created an index of all articles ever printed in PCR (the index was published as part of the Winter 2009 issue, Vol. 20, No. 1). For her part, Amie says: my PCR work started with handling/facilitating/managing the transition from longtime editor Juli Barry and included copyediting, formatting, and project management; AKA “text wrangling and prettifying.” I learned along the way how to transform all those bits and pieces we received into one file, one cohesive journal ready to be printed (whew). It has been an intense learning experience, and I am so pleased that Felicia asked me to come on board years ago. Her trust in me has been extraordinary, and I hope that I have justified her faith and exceeded her expectations. I will miss the days of struggling to edit around a baby sleeping on my chest, or deftly formatting while little hands attempt to make their mark on the keyboard too. Now that I consider it, that might explain some of the errors we have had in the past seven years. Without PCR on my plate. I’ll have the time to renew my dedication to educating my children at home as well co