Dear readers,
I am pleased to welcome you to the Amazon detail page for
BB-67 MONTANA, U.S. Navy Battleship: Why She Matters Today
This is one of my favorites in the ever-growing Nimble Books list. The cover looks terrific--very realistic, just as if the Navy had really built theU.S.S. Montana! The interior of the book includes:
pictures and information about the various design concepts that were explored
the specifications of the final Montana design
color pictures of a beautiful 1:700 scale model of Montana by Imre Somogyi
a beautiful color painting of Montana by author and artist Wayne Scarpaci
a picture of her never-built 1920's predecessor, BB-51 Montana
an essay on "Why She Matters Today"; and
a discussion of Senator Jon Tester's efforts to get the U.S. Navy to name a capital ship after his home state of Montana.
In short, this presents a unique package of art and text devoted exclusively to one of the most interesting hypothetical ships ever designed.
I'm very happy to see that this book is selling well. I hope you enjoy it.
Cordially yours,
Fred Zimmerman
Publisher, Nimble Books LLC
P.S. if you are interested in reading other stuff about Montana, I recommend two major studies of U.S. battleships:
U.S. Battleships: An Illustrated Design History by Norman Friedman and
Battleships: United States Battleships, 1935-1992 (Battleships) by Garzke.
Both of these books rely on archival sources to give a highly technical history of the ten or twenty different designs that were considered for Montana. My book's different in that I tackle the issue of "why do we care about this today" head-on.
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Finally, some real news about THE SOLOMON KEY. According to the publisher, quoted in today’s Wall Street Journal, the release date has been set — but it is a secret. Which is progress! There was no release date at all before. There’s no new news about the content of the book (or any confirmation of the title), but the thrust still seems to be that the book will be set in Washington, D.C. and focus on those wacky Freemason Founding Fathers.
I brought out my SOLOMON KEY pre-book/meta-book in 2005 (!)
and I have to say it has stood the test of time quite well. It has already made a pretty healthy profit, and among my forty titles in print ranks sixth in lifetime revenue per month.
The content is still sound because book is far less speculative than most efforts in the pre-book genre. I cover Brown’s entire oeuvre, and I include a detailed analysis of Dan Brown’s work habits and narrative strategies, but I didn’t think it wise to go on speculative excursions into the occult and Freemasonry before seeing the published books. I stick closely to what Brown and his publishers have actually said about the book. Judge for yourself if you like my approach: take a look at the Table of Contents in Search Inside the Book mode.
I’ve gotten better at covers since I published this book, but I’m reasonably satisfied with the dominant cover image: Kryptos in the CIA courtyard is still a pretty darned cool piece of Washington architecture, and it’s neat to look at and learn about. I would probably use a different font for the title type. Although the cover colors look clunky, they are keyed off the colors used in THE DA VINCI CODE, so I don’t think there was a principled basis for a better choice.
I will update this book when THE SOLOMON KEY finally comes out, but I am not sure exactly what mechanism I will use — I may update this edition, or I may issue a separate thinner paperback. Either way, I will provide a PDF softcopy to previous purchasers, as stated in the book. (Simply send me proof of purchase using the email address in the book).
I will update this post as publication nears. Until then, enjoy the anticipation!
Kathleen Turner made her name as a screen femme fatale in the classic thriller Body Heat. Her new autobiography reveals with unflinching honesty how crippling illness and the pressures of fame tipped her into alcoholism and despair. Here, in the last of three extracts, she recalls some of the more outrageous moments from her movie career…
The extract reads pretty well. I like the way she talks.
wfzimmerman's review: "What I have learned from the LibraryThing reviews:
1) no one really liked the book very much, and some people really hated it;
2) the structure, content, and style, which was a conscious experiment, wasn't a very successful one;
3) people really hate seeing Wikipedia listed as a source.
Fair enough! Onward...
Cordially,
Fred Zimmerman" Nimble Books (2007), Paperback, 188 pages
wfzimmerman's review: "A beautiful new edition from Tor of Isaac Asimov's first novel. I can't wait to re-read this!" Tor Books (2008), Hardcover, 256 pages tags: sf, science fiction
A unique monitoring system and method is provided that involves monitoring user activity in order to facilitate managing and optimizing the utilization of various system resources. In particular, the system can monitor user activity, detect when users need assistance with their specific activities, and identify at least one other user that can assist them. Assistance can be in the form of answering questions, providing guidance to the user as the user completes the activity, or completing the activity such as in the case of taking on an assigned activity. In addition, the system can aggregate activity data across users and/or devices. As a result, problems with activity templates or activities themselves can be more readily identified, user performance can be readily compared, and users can communicate and exchange information regarding similar activity experiences. Furthermore, synchronicity and time-sensitive scheduling of activities between users can be facilitated and improved overall.
What a PITA and resource hog. It would be interesting to see whether this comes out of the Microsoft Research usability team.
I have no hesitation in saying that his book is terrific, and I also have no hesitation in saying that my book is quite a bit more cost-effective than his (which rings up at $268.91!) -- and even has nicer color printing!
George MacDonald Fraser, a British writer whose popular novels about the arch-rogue Harry Flashman followed their hero as he galloped, swashbuckled, drank and womanized his way through many of the signal events of the 19th century, died Wednesday on the Isle of Man.
This is very sad news. He’s an author whose oeuvre I’d like to own in its entirety.
wfzimmerman's review: "Tor's usually sure-footed publicity team stumbles a bit by identifying William H. Drinkard as a 12-year veteran of the Alabama State Legislature. I am sure that the Alabama State Legislature of today is not the Alabama State Legislature of fifty or a hundred years ago, but it's still not exactly a confidence-inspiring background." Tor Books (2008), Hardcover, 544 pages tags: science fiction, sf, ARC