Exciting news! Oz the National Convention will join TeslaCon, an annual Steampunk convention, for 2026. Choosing Oz as their theme, they were looking to work together with the Oz community. With OzCon International on pause, our summer plans were uprooted; the timing couldn’t be better. Named for Nikola Tesla, his work as an inventor and electrical engineer in the 19th century fits well with the Steampunk movement.* With 900 attendees expected, TeslaCon is considerably larger than our events. But like Oz Club conventions, there will be topical presentations, panels, performances, games, contests, costumes, vendors, a makers room for crafts, a game room for games, and theme decor throughout. Professional actors will present a play across the course of the convention featuring the Patchwork Girl and Ojo on a quest. We will have an Oz Club room at the convention Marriott to provide programming, hold our traditional Club auction, and serve as a hospitality spot for Club members. Convention details, hotel information, and registration will go directly through TeslaCon.com. Facebook users also might want to follow the TeslaCon Fans page. They will open call for programming later this month. We’ve already begun to work on Ozziness the Club can contribute to the fun. From Nate Barlow screening Baum’s silent films to presentations and panels led by some of our own well-known presenters, this can be great exposure for our Club to a fandom that loves Victorian literature, cosplay, and social interaction. See the Oz Club Blog in the News tab here at OzClub.org for regular news and information. If you’re interested in presenting, hosting, or performing, or if you’re a Steampunk enthusiast able to help direct us toward points of connection, write Jane Albright at OzConvention@OzClub.org to join the conversation! Just attending? Great! (Let’s all go!) We’ll be in touch during the months ahead with specifics of interest to our members. If you Google a bit, you’ll find right now that this fandom is very committed to cosplay; regulars are already designing in green. (Rumor has it Shaggy Man will be found chatting with Sir Hokus of Pokes in green armor….) TeslaCon is later in the year than is usual for us, Nov. 12-15. The site, Middleton, Wisconsin, is adjacent to Madison (fly in, or drive 90 minutes from Milwaukee or 2 hours from Chicago). Convention activities are held at a Marriott although room blocks at additional hotels are the norm for TeslaCon. Watch for more details in the months ahead. A quick internet search defines Steampunk as “a retro-futuristic subgenre of science fiction and fantasy that blends 19th-century Victorian-era aesthetics and steam-powered technology with modern, fantastical inventions. It often reimagines history, featuring airships, clockwork automatons, and brass gadgets, blending industrial, elegant, and romanticized elements.”
Exciting news! Oz the National Convention will join TeslaCon, an annual Steampunk convention, for 2026. Choosing Oz as their theme, they were looking to work together with the Oz community. With OzCon International on pause, our summer plans were uprooted; the timing couldn’t be better. Named for Nikola Tesla, his work as an inventor and electrical engineer in the 19th century fits well with the Steampunk movement.* With 900 attendees expected, TeslaCon is considerably larger than our events. But like Oz Club conventions, there will be topical presentations, panels, performances, games, contests, costumes, vendors, a makers room for crafts, a game room for games, and theme decor throughout. Professional actors will present a play across the course of the convention featuring the Patchwork Girl and Ojo on a quest. We will have an Oz Club room at the convention Marriott to provide programming, hold our traditional Club auction, and serve as a hospitality spot for Club members. Convention details, hotel information, and registration will go directly through TeslaCon.com. Facebook users also might want to follow the TeslaCon Fans page. They will open call for programming later this month. We’ve already begun to work on Ozziness the Club can contribute to the fun. From Nate Barlow screening Baum’s silent films to presentations and panels led by some of our own well-known presenters, this can be great exposure for our Club to a fandom that loves Victorian literature, cosplay, and social interaction. If you’re interested in presenting, hosting, or performing, or if you’re a Steampunk enthusiast able to help direct us toward points of connection, write Jane Albright at OzConvention@OzClub.org to join the conversation! Just attending? Great! (Let’s all go!) We’ll be in touch during the months ahead with specifics of interest to our members. If you Google a bit, you’ll find right now that this fandom is very committed to cosplay; regulars are already designing in green. (Rumor has it Shaggy Man will be found chatting with Sir Hokus of Pokes in green armor….) TeslaCon is later in the year than is usual for us, Nov. 12-15. The site, Middleton, Wisconsin, is adjacent to Madison (fly in, or drive 90 minutes from Milwaukee or 2 hours from Chicago). Convention activities are held at a Marriott although room blocks at additional hotels are the norm for TeslaCon. Watch for more details in the months ahead. A quick internet search defines Steampunk as “a retro-futuristic subgenre of science fiction and fantasy that blends 19th-century Victorian-era aesthetics and steam-powered technology with modern, fantastical inventions. It often reimagines history, featuring airships, clockwork automatons, and brass gadgets, blending industrial, elegant, and romanticized elements.”
This year’s edition of Oziana, the annual fiction anthology of the International Wizard of Oz Club, features six stories and one poem. Each story was submitted to the Club’s annual writing contest and, when an early-Oz theme appeared, was chosen for this 2024 issue. From paving a familiar road and two different perspectives on the melting of the Wicked Witch, er… “Wise Woman” of the West, to early days of ruling Oz after the Wizard departs, our authors offer some creative glimpses into Oz history. A concluding poem sets the stage for Oziana 2025 when our cast of characters will expand to include more beloved favorites from later tales in the Oz series. This year’s issue also offers a short profile of each contributor, which we’ve never done before. Paul Miles Schneider, known today for his original Oz fiction, grew up reading the Oz books. Packing for a cross-country move, he found an original painting from his youth and agreed to let us use it as our wraparound cover. While it’s not uncommon for an Oz Club publication to arrive a bit later than we’d all prefer, this delay has quite an explanation. The bookmarks for the exclusive edition used as a thank you gift to our donors called for 15 contributor signatures. They started with a the roadtrip to Charlotte, North Carolina, to gather four signature—and survive a hurricane. From there they took a roadtrip to Connecticut followed with a transatlantic flight to England. They flew again to double-stops in Canada before returning to the United States. Skipping from address to address from the West Coast to Florida, one contributor was missed! After that catch-up trip they finally arrived four months later fully signed—just in time to wait out a blizzard. Now that they’ve found their way to our donors hands, public sales of the issue are open. Writers and illustrators don’t have to come to us through the contests; you are always welcome to submit your original work for consideration to Oziana@OzClub.org. Several stories are already earmarked for publication; more are welcome and illustrators are especially appreciated. We’d love to hear from you! Purchase your copy at Lulu.com. Oziana 2024 “The Moment Glinda Won Oz,” illustration by Suren Oganessian “A Green Fix” by Kelsey G. Kappel with illustrations by Anna-Maria Cool “The Wicked Witch of the West” by Kathleen Murphey with illustrations by W. W. Denslow “Hope Melts Eternal” by Suren Oganessian with illustrations by Mel Vavaroutsos “A Tenebrous Tower in Oz” by D.J. Tyrer with illustrations by Chris Diket “Straw and Magic” by Malcolm Niess with illustrations by David Diket “The Soldier with Green Whiskers and the Guardian of the Gates” by J. L. Bell with illustrations by Rob Lauer Oziana 2024 Authors and Illustrators “Oz It Was” by David M. Perkins; illustrated by Thomas and T Craft Original cover illustration by Paul Miles Schneider