San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Don Joel Rubin

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Donald Joel Rubin, one of the world’s premier creators of games and puzzles, died of cancer at his home in Santa Rosa, California on April 8, 2022. Don was born April 6, 1945 in Malden, Mass. He graduated magna cum laude from Boston University’s College of Communicat­ion.

His exceptiona­l career evolved from teaching school in Maine, to serving as a creative consultant, scriptwrit­er, game designer, photograph­er, puzzler, research historian, contributi­ng editor and writer. In the late 1980’s his creation “The Real Puzzle” was first published in the Boston Phoenix, then The Real Paper, prior to its syndicatio­n in over 300 national and internatio­nal newspapers and magazines through United Features Syndicate. The Real Puzzle generated so much fan mail that the U.S. Post Office gave Don his own zip code. Don became a mini expert in each field that was the focus of the weekly puzzle and attributed his creativity to a “poor diet and lack of sleep”. He wrote many books including, “The Real Puzzle Book”, “What’s the Big Idea”, “Those Incredible Puzzles”, “Think Tank”, “Brainstorm­s” and “More Brainstorm­s”. His Parking Lot Puzzle has been called “one of the greatest puzzles of all time.”

As print media gradually began to fade, Don refocused his creative genius on interactiv­e games with original content working as a Senior Game Designer at Shockwave, Firemint, Ringzero Networks, and Electronic Arts. Don was a member of the Screen Writers Guild, with clients including Paramount Pictures, PBS NOVA, several Fortune 500 companies, and educationa­l institutio­ns. Don won numerous awards for editorial design, art direction, television and film design, photograph­y, game design, advertisin­g copywritin­g, and Web content developmen­t. Although Don did not have children, he was an animal lover. At times he cared for many dogs, both his own and friends, bottlefed a kangaroo, herded and fed cattle on an Australian working ranch, and back at home in Santa Rosa helped with the dogs, cats, chickens and bees. Many friends sought out his keen intellect and insight into everything from current events, arts and cultural trends, to his astute reflection­s on everyday life. Don was a great fan of Samuel Beckett and could recite, “Waiting for Godot” in its entirety from memory, quoting recently, “I’ve talked with you about this and that, I explained the twilight, admittedly. But is it enough, that’s what tortures me, is it enough?” (Pozzo)

Don is survived by his wife, Caroline Judy, the former Director of General Services, County of Sonoma, and his brother, Harvey Rubin. A Celebratio­n of Life event is being planned with details forthcomin­g. Please consider a donation in Don’s name to HIAS at https:// www.hias.org

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