High-Country Health Food and Cafe in Mariposa California

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'Click' for More Info: 'Chocolate Soup', Fine Home Accessories and Gifts, Located in Mariposa, California
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'Click' for More Info: Inter-County Title Company Located in Mariposa, California

trophy-bassLaine Nooney, a media studies researcher and cultural historian of technology, will be visiting Oakhurst, CA from September 18-22, 2014. Nooney is writing a book about Sierra On-Line, a home entertainment software company which was headquartered in the region during the 1980s and 90s. She is seeking to formally interview anyone who was associated with the company, or its owners, Ken and Roberta Williams, as part of her research on the company's history.

“This is a book about video game history, but also about what it means to run a technology business in rural America,” Nooney says. “Sierra was one of the largest employers in the town. I want to explore the relationship of the company to the region, the town, and to its previous employees.” Sierra On-Line is best remembered for producing award-winning adventure games like King's Quest and Leisure Suit Larry, and was, for some years, one of the largest independent producers of home entertainment software in the world. Its co-founder, Roberta Williams, was the first female computer game designer in the U.S.

Nooney is coordinating her efforts with the organizers of the upcoming Mountain Heritage Days, and will have a table at the Fresno Flats Historic Park after the Saturday Parade. “Video game history is an important part of Oakhurst's heritage. For almost fifteen years, Oakhurst was known as home to one of the nation's leaders in interactive computer entertainment. People across the world still recognize the Sierra logo, which is an image of the Half Dome.”

Nooney's relationship with the company's history is personal for her. “Like many kids of my generation who had computers, I grew up with these games. Writing this history gives me a way of exploring video games beyond my nostalgic recollections.”

Nooney hopes to speak with ex-employees, friends and spouses of ex-employees, local business owners who may have worked with the company, and anyone else with memories to share. “Everyone has something to contribute,” Nooney says, “whether they had a positive or negative impression of the company.”

The oral interviews Nooney collects will be permanently housed at the Fresno Flat Historic Research Library and the Strong Museum of Play in Rochester, NY, where they will be available to researchers for years to come. “Like any oral history, the content of these conversations grows more valuable over time. There will be insights historians can draw from them 100 years from now that I can't yet see. It is important that these memories are preserved.”

Residents interested in being interview with Laine Nooney September 18-22 can contact her at: laine.nooney@gmail.com or call 937-219-5209.

Additionally, Nooney has made a Facebook group, Sierra On-Line Memories, for people to join and contact her that way.