Leland Purvis and my The Imitation Game: Alan Turing Decoded comes out Tuesday, March 22, and I’m excited by that. To warm you up for it, here are two pieces of audio memoir I enjoyed. I’ll offer two more that I like even better tomorrow.
Scotland: I visited and I hope you get to visit too
Random notes from a trip to Scotland…
What to do about good reviews and fans: Two quotes from Heinlein
I’m in the middle of the first volume of Patterson’s meticulous biography of Robert Heinlein (Robert A. Heinlein in Dialogue with His Century: Learning Curve) and among the many interesting things RAH said, in interesting ways, the following two quotes stuck out.
“The unique problem of organized fandom is one that I have wondered about for many years. Here is a group made up largely of well-intentioned and mentally-interesting people — how is it and why is it that they tolerate among themselves a percentage of utter jerks?–people with no respect for privacy, no hesitation at all about libel and slander, and a sadistic drive to inflict pain. Marion, I do not understand it.”
“The write-up made me sound so omniscient that I was tempted to call myself up and ask for some advice and a little coaching.”
Something(s) to read, 2014
It’s finally getting cold again, and I’m staying
inside and reading more. You might also plan to spend extra time
indoors in the next few weeks. Or months. We’ll see what the Polar Vortex has to say about that. So in case you wondered, here
are the best books I read in 2014, complete with
my brief notes to myself about them. They’re in no particular order — they’re all good and some are even better than that.
something new here that you like!
Suspended in Language in translation
Briefly: Suspended in Language will soon (where “soon” is a ways off, really, since translation takes a while!) be available in Japanese from Kodansha and Korean from Green Knowledge.
Kodansha — via their Blue Backs line of books — did a wonderful job with Feynman and I’ve been very pleased with all the Korean editions of my books as well, so I’m excited and pleased to have my two physics heroes meet up out on the Pacific Rim.
G.T. Labs books: now DRM-free at comiXology
The title says it all, but in case you want more, you can read the press release: “New DRM-free Publishers at ComiXology“.
A note from the author:Hi! Jim Ottaviani here, writing to say thanks for downloading [BOOK TITLE]. You probably expected to see a bunch of legalese at this point, but I almost never make it all the way through those licenses myself, so you won’t get that here. You also won’t get passwords, due dates, or DRM. We want you to read this book however it suits you, be it on a desktop computer, a laptop, a tablet, a phone… From here on out, this copy is yours.So, I hope you enjoy [BOOK TITLE], and if you do I have two requests.If you want to share it with friends who live in Ann Arbor, please encourage them to get the book from AADL themselves. This is an experiment for both the library and me; we’d like to find out how many people want to read books this way. So if your friends live here, they can get it the same way you did, and that would help us learn more. And hey, if they don’t already have a library card, now is the perfect time for them to get one! AADL is a wonderful resource, and you’ll both be happy you introduced them to it.And if you planned to send it to a friend from out of town? Well, while it’s uncomfortable to say it so plainly, here goes: You and I chip in via taxes to support all the great books, music, and movies — not to mention services — AADL provides. Some of my share comes from sales of the books I write. If you give this to someone who hasn’t chipped in, either directly or indirectly, we’ll end up with fewer great things to watch and listen to and read. So instead of sending them your copy, please suggest that they buy one, or ask their local library to order one for its collection.Thanks for reading, and again, I hope you enjoy the book.