Aug. 11th, 2012

beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Shopping for used books today is nothing like it was.

There are Web sites that aggregate the offerings of hundreds of bookstores. You can search across the U.S., maybe further, with your fingertips instead of your feet.

Better yet, you can tell a robot what your're looking for, and instruct the robot to e-mail you when a fresh copy of the book turns up on some bookseller's virtual shelf. If you're like me, you can lurk for months or years waiting for a copy of a usually-overpriced tome to appear at a price you're willing to pay.

Last week, two different books I'd been hunting for years both popped up; both, to my delight, arrived yesterday.



One is Living on a Shoestring: A Scrounge Manual for the Hobbyist by the late George M. Ewing.

Jeff Duntemann called this book "a Ewing brain dump on how to do more with less and repurpose what you and I might call junk into the raw materials of a comfortable (if eccentric) life. It’s as close to a memoir as we’ll ever have, as those who knew him will attest. He was always doing this stuff, and developed a sense for outside-the-box make-do technology that served him well both personally and in his fiction."

George wrote science fiction and, for computer and ham radio magazines, nonfiction; this was his only book. Living on a Shoestring was published in 1983, not long before Wayne Green Books ceased to exist, so there were never many copies sold, and used copies are only rarely seen. I read a borrowed copy not long after it came out (the binding was absolutely terrible and pages were threatening to fall out) and have always wanted my own. Fortunately, it seems to have retained its pages. I'd forgotten how nicely the goofy illustrations by Roger Goode enhance George's text. I miss George; re-reading this will probably make me miss him even more.

The second book is Plurality of Worlds: The Extraterrestrial Life Debate from Democritus to Kant by Steven J. Dick, published in 1984.

One often sees science articles that say something like "For centuries humans have looked up at the stars and wondered whether other beings might exist up there..."

Dick will tell you exactly who wondered, when they wondered, where they wondered, and what they wondered about.

I've often come across references to this book. In a kind of intellectual tag-team game, Steven Dick's friend Michael Crowe-- from whom I took a very enjoyable class at Notre Dame-- wrote The Extraterrestrial Life Debate, 1750-1900 in 1988. Then Dick wrote The Biological Universe: The Twentieth Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate and the Limits of Science. I've found these two books to be very valuable. So I have long wanted to read Plurality of Worlds, but it's not in many libraries, and the available used copies tend to be expensive.

I'll enjoy the ritual of retiring these titles from my search list at Abebooks after many years. Now if I could just replace my photocopy-from-microfilm of John D. Clark's Ignition!: An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants with a reasonably-priced hardcover...
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
At lunch hour Friday, I went to Dupage Airport in St. Charles, Illinois with some colleagues to take a look at Fifi, a Boeing B-29 Superfortress.

The Commemorative Air Force brought Fifi and a Beech C-45 Expeditor, (the military version of the Beechcraft Model 18) to our local airport for the weekend. For a $5 donation, you can tour the cockpit and the forward bomb bay. For a lot more, you can take a ride.



If there is anyone in your life who loves airplanes, and you're in striking distance of Dupage Airport Saturday or Sunday, bring 'em out, hand 'em a five-dollar bill, and show them a piece of World War II. They'll love you for it. This has been a public service announcement.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
For some years there’s been a project to publish the complete works of Robert A. Heinlein. I understand that it faltered when the original publisher, Meisha Merlin, went out of business in 2007. But then a publishing company was invented by Heinlein’s estate. and it has produced 46 fancy volumes of "The Virginia Edition."

The other day, Deb Houdek Rule announced that a Virginia Edition sampler PDF is now available to showcase some of the art, commentary, and shorter Heinlein writings (including a selection of his letters) prepared for the edition. (Robert Pearson alerted me to the news.)

The reviewer's cliché "for Heinlein completists" is true by definition in this case, and a lot of items in the sampler are very, very minor-- but some may be of interest to the casual Heinlein reader.

Here's the table of contents:

Ray Guns and Rocket Ships
An essay about science fiction for a library newsletter.

Letter to Larry Niven & Jerry Pournelle about The Mote in God’s Eye
Lengthy critique of a draft of the novel, suggesting many improvements.

Beyond Doubt
A story written with Alma Wentz that Heinlein classed among his "stinkeroos."

Letter to F. M. Busby on Freedom and Race Relations
I haven't read this one yet.  People are always trying to divine Heinlein's real political opinions; this may serve as fodder for such discussions.

Letter to John Arwine On the Atomic Age
15 September 1945:
"We stopped off at Los Alamos and saw some of the scientists who devised the atomic bomb and were elated to discover that the overwhelming majority were of our viewpoint and had already organized to make their views known and felt. They believe that the secret techniques of atomic weapons must be turned over to an international world authority at once, surrendering whatever sovereignty is necessary, and that this world government must have the authority to poke into every plant, laboratory, mine, factory, etc., on the face of the globe in order to insure that atomics is a complete monopoly of the global government. Then and only then may atomic power be used, under license, for commerce. The Global authority and no other shall have atomic weapons. They believe that and believe that no other possible way is out."
Why Buy A Stone Axe
One of several unsold articles written in Heinlein's feverish postwar attempt to influence the U.S.'s nuclear weapons.

Brave New World
Unpublished doggerel.

"All You Zombies—"
Heinlein's best short story, and science fiction's best time-travel story.

If any of this sounds interesting, download the sampler.

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beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
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