Dec 172014
 

The latest releases in the “US Aerospace Projects” line (see the full library HERE):

US Bomber Projects #12 contents:

  • Boeing Model 464-41: A turboprop B-52 predecessor
  • Boeing “Big Bird”: a long-durational, low-speed, low-altitude missile carrying loiterer
  • Douglas MX-2091-E: A 1950’s canard configured missile carrier
  • Boeing Model 701-238: A supersonic design on the road to the B-59
  • Northrop Nuclear Flying Wing: Atomic power with two crew pods
  • Martin Model 223-12: the final design in the XB-48 design series
  • Rockwell MRCC: An airplane that could be tossed into space atop an RSRM
  • Lockheed CL-820-8: A Mach 3 variable-geometry design

USBP #12 can be downloaded as a PDF file for only $4:

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usbp12promo

usbp12ad2

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New: American Nuclear Explosive Devices #01

This is a prototype issue for what may become a series but which I hope to turn into a Real Book. The plan is to eventually document via accurate and detailed diagrams every nuclear explosive device produced by the US (obviously some are a little lean on declassified data). This includes bombs, Re-Entry Vehicles, a few actual “physics packages” and some stand-alone test devices. ANED01 contains information and diagrams of the first three atom bombs worked on by the US: the Thin Man and Little Boy air-droppable bombs and the Trinity “Gadget” test device. The American Nuclear Explosive Devices webpage is HERE.

ANED01 is formatted for 11X17, so the diagrams are good and large.

ANED #01 can be downloaded as a PDF file for only $4:

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aned01promo

 Posted by at 1:04 pm
Nov 202014
 

As a child of the 70’s and 80’s, I remember going into the “Waldens” book store at the mall from time to time and looking at all the sci-fi and fantasy books. This was in an era when Frank Frazetta art was all over the place and Chevy vans were like as not to have airbrushed wizards and dragons on the sides (the 70’s were crazy).

Somethig I clearly recall were the “Gor” books of John Norman. At the time, they were omni-present in book stores. But I never read them; most of my early reading was library books, and the libraries never seemed to have them. And then sometime in the 1980’s they vanished, like the fever-dream of the Carter era, never to be seen again.

But then in 2008 I have a brief stint in Maryland. And like the Carter era reborn under Obama, the Gor books returned… or at least a whole bunch of ’em at a hole-in-the-wall used bookstore near Elkton, MD. They were cheap ($.50 each, IIRC), and looked like cheap mindless entertainment, so I bought ’em and started reading. They started off pretty much as I expected… a goofy mis-mash of sci-fi and fantasy tropes… aliens and magic and swords and barbarians and such. Not in the slightest good literature, but decent enough mindless entertainment.

But after a couple books, a disturbing trend began to become apparent. The author started to work into the story details about the system of slavery used on the world of “Gor;” in and of itself that’s not a biggie, as slavery is a pretty much inevitable result of fantasy (or pre-industrial or non-capitalist reality). But it became clear that the author thought that slavery itself was a pretty good idea… and that it was the natural state of women. A woman unslaved and unbeated was, it seemed, a great tragedy.  Sado-masochism, all that weirdass stuff. This soon became the over-riding theme of *all* of the books, overwhelming what had previously been adequate Edgar Rice Burroughs-style cheapo fantasy. Bad as the whack-you-upside-the-head-message became, the writing became boring. My stubbornness was defeated by the books awfulness and I gave up after a small fraction of the books.

I suppose maybe I shoulda Googled ’em before reading them. Shrug. Live and learn. Well nearly fifty years after the first Gor book was written, John Norman is apparently still plugging away at them; the most recent having been published in 2013. Somehow I seem to have managed to fail to buy the newer stuff since that original purchase of old paperbacks in ’08.

So imagine my surprise to find these “unpublished Gor books” that almost seem as if they might be entertaining…

Unpublished Gor Books

hatofgor rogainebeardgor

More such books at the link.

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And because why not:

75092ae7014bacf2c83afbee006c5efcbbe616f277a8d0839f92cee55d19babd

 Posted by at 12:51 pm
Oct 292014
 

The first five issues of US Bomber Projects are now available as ebooks at Amazon. The links below not only take you to the Amazon listings, if you then buy something (*anything*, so fee free to splurge on laptops and cars and jewelry and such), I get a small commission.

I would appreciate feedback… everything from constructive criticism to reviews posted over at Amazon.

 

UPDATE: It seems at least some people can’t see the Amazon link-box thingies posted below. So… two alternatives.

1) Type “US Bomber Projects” in the Amazon search box you should see at the upper right, just above the “Tip Jar.”

2) TRY THIS

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If you dowloaded an early version of USBO01, it seems that you *can* download the latest version without re-buying it.

 Posted by at 7:22 am
Oct 252014
 

Based on some feedback, I have re-uploaded both USBP01 and USBP02 to further tweak the formatting and the images. It’ll probably be a few hours before the updates are available. But once available, I’d be interested in hearing from prior purchasers whether or not you can successfully download the new versions without having to re-pay for them (I’d hope so, but I don’t know for sure). And of course, any comments regarding how they look on what device.

I expect that there’ll be no Perfect Solution for every possible device, but I’m sure there’s a Best possible. Hopefully these are just about there…

 

 Posted by at 9:56 am
Oct 242014
 

I have – I *think* – just corrected an error in the listing that should open sales up worldwide. If some of all y’all furriners would like to take a look and see if it’s still unavailable, that’d be helpful. Note, though, that USBP#02 has been uploaded and is going through review… and – again I *think* – should be far better in terms of image resolution. If I get confirmation from a customer or three that #2 is better than #1, I will re-upload #1. I don’t know if previous purchasers can download the new, better version or not…

#2 took freakin’ *forever* to get properly formatted. I couldn’t find a way to get the “Caliber” converter on my computer to *not* reduce the image resolution, so I had to use the Amazon system directly, which meant uploading the thing and waiting for it to process, then looking through the annoyingly slow previewer for the innumerable and mysterious formatting issues. After around 20 cycles of this, I *think* I’ve got it hammered into shape with full-rez images. So while this is formatted and laid out differently from the standard PDF version, the image quality should be as good.

Unless something screwy happens (and, gosh, when has *that* ever happened), USBP#2 should be available on Amazon in the next some hours. I have high hopes of being asleep at the time.  So if you’d like to be the first kid on your block with a copy, or want to help out be getting a copy early and providing feedback (if so, thanks), just search for “US Bomber Projects” on Amazon.

 

My plan at this time is to keep publications at Amazon about five or six issues behind those on my website.

 Posted by at 10:06 pm
Oct 242014
 

I have gotten some feedback by buyers of US Bomber Projects #01 on Amazon for the Kindle. Not a lot, but some. Half of the feedback is “Amazon won’t let me buy it because of where I am.” Hmmmph. I followed Amazons recommendations on pricing, and I guess that includes making it unavailable to all y’all non-American-types, even though I was pretty sure that the list of nations that it would be available in included the whole Anglosphere and then some. Or maybe it just takes longer to become available elsewhere. Hmmmph, I say.

Also: For USBP #02 on Amazon, I plan on tinkering with the format a bit. Nothing major, but I plan on trying to figure out why the filesize, an the imagery, got a lot smaller.

Also also: I went to Amazon and did a search on “bomber project” to see if and where USBP01 showed up. Turns out it’s right up there. Curiously, as you can see from the screenshot, USBP01 is listed as “#1 Best Seller in 30-Minute History Short Reads.” Woo! That was promising, so I spooled up the page that tells me how it’s selling, to see how many hundreds of copies it has sold to reach #1 status. Six!. Well… just “six.” Not “six hundred.” So I’m guessing that “30-minute short history reads” is a category that’s not exactly burning up the charts.

Image1

 

It’s in among some good company, at least. Pity about the dreary cover, I suppose.


 

 Posted by at 5:33 am
Oct 222014
 

So a few days ago I released US Bomber Projects #11, US Transport Projects #01 and the 11X17 collection for USBP 07-09. Sales were… well, even more dismal than what I’ve grown accustomed to. So I wandered on over to Amazon to finally start trying to sell these through their system. I guess they don’t sell PDFs, but only Kindle format pubs… but the Amazon conversion process did *horrible* things to USBP #01. When I fed it the native Word document, the text got formatted all over the place, and the images were all replaced with red X’s. When i fed it the PDF version, the images were installed, but chopped up, and the text was still a mess. So I guess I’ll have to utterly repave every issue. Feh.

Anyone have any successful history with this? Specifically, half-image, half-text Amazon publications?

UPDATE 1

OK, I hammered away at USBP #01 and finally got it into a form that I think works (looks ok on the “Calibre” epub creator/viewer) and I seem to have walked it through the publication process on Amazon. However, it’s “in review,” and that could take 12 hours. So… there it is, I suppose. Assuming it all goes through, the selling price is set at $2.99. That’s a heck of a hit compared to the $4 price for standard PDF versions available directly from me (especially after Amazon takes their chunk), but I guess it’s ok for older issues. So if this works at all, new issues will be released on my website, and wind up on Amazon sometime down the line.

I will of course post a link to this when/if it becomes available. I have high hopes that there’s at least one somebody out there who just can’t wait to be first in line to get on board with this… and who will point out any formatting flaws or other problems that may appear on this first issue.

UPDATE 2

OK, it has gone through the approval process, and is now available over at Amazon. If anyone wants to be the first to take the plunge, I’d sure like to hear how it works & looks on your e-reader. On looking at the listing I realized that I left a lot out of the description, so I went back and edited that stuff in… but it appears that changes have to go right back into review, so for a number of hours the description is pretty sparse.

 

 

 Posted by at 8:35 pm
Oct 202014
 

As well as the 11X17-format PDF collection of diagrams for USBP07 through 09.

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USBP 11

Issue 11 of US Bomber Projects is now available (see HERE for the entire series). Issue #11 includes:

  • Boeing Model 464-40: The first all-jet-powered design in the quest for the B-52
  • North American D-118: A turboprop conversion of the F-82E into a ground attacker
  • Boeing Model 701-218: A twin engined supersonic concept
  • NAA Model 705-00-04: A ramjet cruise missile with a manned rocket booster
  • Northrop Nuclear Flying Wing: A well defended if rather hypothetical design
  • Martin Model 223-11: *almost* the XB-48
  • Boeing B-1: The design that might have beaten the Rockwell concept
  • Bell/Martin 464L: The submission that most closely resembled what the Dyna Soar eventually became

USBP #11 can be downloaded as a PDF file for only $4:

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USTP 01

And also available, issue #01 of US Transport Projects. Done in the same format as US Bomber Projects, USTP will cover flying vehicles designed to transport cargo, passengers and troops. Issue 01 includes:

  • Redstone Troop Transport: An Army concept for a troop & supplies launcher
  • Lockheed CL-334-1: A small STOL battlefield transport
  • NASA LH2 747: A “three fuselage” hydrogen-fueled jetliner
  • Douglas DC-8-1004: A very clean pusher-prop passenger liner
  • Bell/Boeing/NASA ATT: A wasp-waisted transonic concept
  • Boeing Model 733-94: An early SST
  • Aereon Dynairship: A giant modern airship
  • Boeing Model 473-10: One of the earliest jetliner designs

USTP #01 can be downloaded as a PDF file for only $4:

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Large format USBP drawings, Issues 07-09

The CAD drawings created for USBP reformatted and rescaled for 11X17 collected in a separate volume. Drawings have in some cases been corrected, improved and added to.

USBP 11X17 07-09 collects the diagrams created for issues 07, 08 and 09, including:

Boeing model 464-25; Boeing Model 828-2; Fairchild N-12; Rockwell D645-3; Boeing Model 701-273-7; Martin Model 223-7; Convair 464L Dyna Soar I; Convair 464L Dyna Soar III; Bell MX Hovercraft; Bell mobile defense platform; Boeing Model 464-27; Rockwell D645-6; Republic M-4.25; Martin MAMBA; Boeing Model 484-2-2 (twin-pod); Martin Model 223-8; Douglas 464L Dyna Soar I; Boeing Model 800-11A; Boeing Model 464-33-0; Consolidated Army Bombardment Type; GE Supersonic System 6X; Convair B/J-58 B-58C; Boeing Model 484-2-2; Martin Model 223-9; Northrop N-206 Dyna Soar I/II/III; Boeing Model 800-15A

USBP11x17-01-03 can be downloaded as a PDF file for only $10:
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usbp11x17-07-09ad

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 Posted by at 7:35 am
Oct 172014
 

U.S. tourist gets trapped in London bookstore

Short form: guy wanders into a sizable bookstore just before closing, goes upstairs to use their WiFi, doesn’t notice when they close and gets locked in for several hours.

I was reminded of “The Tattered Cover.” When I lived near Denver in the late 1990’s, there was a bookstore in downtown Denver right across the street from an upscale shopping mall that, IIRC, claimed to be the largest bookstore in the world (or perhaps the US, I forget). In any event, it was *big.* Loved that place, even though, oddly, only a small percentage of the store was devoted to science, engineering and sci-fi. Then I moved away in 2000.

A few years back I passed through Denver and decided to stop in and see the place. I was shocked to find that the site was now some other wholly unrelated business. Fortunately, I found that they had simply moved. So I found their new digs. Their new smaller digs. Their new much less impressive digs. Their new stomp-on-my-youthful-memories digs. Bah.

The original Tattered Cover was the sort of place a bookworm could get lost in. The new one… meh.

 Posted by at 9:24 pm