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- Erik Reichenbach was born on November 27, 1985 and grew up in the Brighton/ Pinckney area of Michigan, USA. He is notable for his appearance on the reality television show Survivor Micronesia (2008) and Survivor Caramoan (2013), both airing on CBS. Erik is a comic artist, illustrator, and graphic designer known for several publications including Starving For Attention: A Completely Legal Parody (2013), Town of Tymes: Teddy Attack (2010), Town of Tymes: A Crazy Kind of Trust (2011), Seed of Sam (2021) and Straight Outta Freemanville (2019) written by Ajani Brown. In 2013, Erik was invited to table in artist alley at New York Comic Con. In 2019, he was invited to speak as a panel guest at San Diego Comic Con with writer Ajani Brown discussing their collaboration on Straight Outta Freemanville.
Erik's art has been published and featured in People Magazine alongside Stephen Fishbach's weekly Survivor recap blogs, in Entertainment Weekly, and as tribe art in several episodes of Survivor where Reichenbach competed. - Writer
- Soundtrack
Novelist Glendon Swarthout had the widest literary range of any American author of his generation, writing 16 novels, which ranged from dramas to comedies to romances and mysteries, and another 6 novellas for young adults with his wife, Kathryn. Many of Glendon's novels became international bestsellers and book club editions, reprinted in innumerable paperback editions, some still available in bookstores and libraries worldwide. With a PhD. in Victorian literature, as well as Master's and B.A. degrees in English from the University of Michigan and Michigan State University, Dr. Swarthout knew almost too much about the great works of fiction and their authors, and was constantly trying to top them, never writing sequels to any of his hit novels or a series of books based on his lead characters. Glendon later admitted this was possibly a mistake, for critics and fans never knew what might come out of his typewriter next, although editors tried to get him to write a Where The Girls Are or a series of Shootist Westerns many times. Still, Glendon won many writing awards for his stories and quite a few of them were also eventually made into interesting motion pictures, including the film hits Where The Boys Are (MGM,1960) and The Shootist (Paramount, 1976), as well as less successful films, Seventh Cavalry (Columbia, 1956), They Came To Cordura (Columbia, 1959), and Bless the Beasts & Children (Columbia, 1972). Bless the Beasts has never been out of print since 1970, though, and another new American edition of The Shootist was reprinted by Bison Books in late 2011.