I just sent in the final photos, graphs, and
manuscript for the second edition of The Wind at Work, due out in March 2013, and to celebrate I’m rerunning
my blog on writing the book -- pre- and post-internet.
Back in 1995 I wrote my first book The Wind At Work, a history of wind
energy, and sent it to Chicago Review Press. They liked it, but replied that all their children’s books
include activities. Would I be willing to write some? Would I!
Creating activities was fun, relating windmills to
science, creative writing, drawing and painting, sewing, cooking, singing,
environmental research, and community action. Who knew?
All this took place back in the Dark Ages, aka
1990s, aka pre–internet.
RESEARCHING WAY BACK THEN
To research the book I read books and more books,
using public and university libraries, interlibrary loans, and used bookstores.
I traveled to the Netherlands, the American Midwest, and a wind turbine factory
in Tehachapi, California. To find photographs, paintings, etchings, and the
like I searched through books. I visited and/or wrote to historical societies,
the Library of Congress, tourist sites, and libraries. I received originals and
photocopies and then sent purchase and permission letters, all by snail mail.
And finally I sent off packages of photographs, slides, drawings, etc. to the
publisher, all printed on paper!
I spent a small fortune on long distance telephone
calls interviewing windmill people and trying to locate the addresses and phone
numbers of restored windmills in small towns all around the US and Canada –
this in pre-free-long-distance-phone-plan days.
Then in 1997, it all came together in The Wind at Work: An Activity Guide to
Windmills. Like my first love,
this book holds a special place in my heart. Yes, I went on to others, leaving
it behind, making longer commitments, but the memory of that my first kiss on my name on my book lingers on…..
Aside: The Wind at Work
has stayed in print for nearly fifteen years. Let’s put our hands together for small presses in general,
and Chicago Review Press in particular.
I visited their offices in 1997 and again last summer. They have
expanded from one floor to an entire building in downtown Chicago, and are
doing very well, thank you. I plan to interview CRP publisher, Cynthia Sherry,
in a future blog. [July, 2012 – I’m still planning to.]
FAST FORWARD TO 2011
I’d been thinking of doing an updated version of The Wind at Work for a while, for the
contemporary section on wind turbines was woefully out of date. Last spring
(2011,) following the earthquake and nuclear disaster in Japan, I emailed
Cynthia and….. the warehouse was low on stock. Could I do a new edition for
2012 publication? Could I!
I spent the summer reading, interviewing people,
and searching for new photos, graphs, and charts. But I neither sent not
received one letter by snail mail, visited no libraries, and read not one book. I did 100% of my research online. Why? Because that’s where the
information lives.
I browsed 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change Report that won the Nobel prize; material from American, Canadian, and
Europeans Wind Energy Associations, Global Wind Energy Council, American Lung
Association, U.S. Department of Energy, National Renewable Energy Laboratory,
Audubon Society, and many more sources. I watched videos and read reports,
scientific studies, congressional hearing statements, newspaper stories from
around the world, and more – all at my computer. I’ve created some new activities for the new book. These and some of the old activities
also use internet resources.
As for new illustrations – all online. Not only contemporary material, but
historical photos as well. Since I
wrote the first book, Steve Jacobs a scion of the Jacobs Wind Electric Plant
Company, found photos as far back as the 1920s and put them on their website,
and on Flickr. A piece of history I could only describe in words in 1997, I can
illustrate in 2012. Here’s a Jacobs ‘wind plant’ spinning in Antarctica in
1933!
As for “Where to Find a Windmill.” I didn’t make
one phone call, I just googled them all.
Aside:
As I began my photo research, I unearthed old paper files from a box in a
closet. I found the manila file marked “picture permissions.” With trembling
hands, I plucked a letter from dozens nestled there. I let out a cheer when I
saw the words “I hereby grant Gretchen Woelfle…. license to reproduce in all
editions of the book…” Those six precious words saved me days and weeks of
work. I sent a silent blessing to the forgotten hero who helped me compose that
permission letter back in 1997.
HOW ON EARTH…..
As I worked on the new The Wind at Work, I wondered – rather rhetorically and not for the
first time – how I, and others, ever
wrote books without the internet.
Despite all the above, I am writing a paper book –
one that Chicago Review Press will publish in three electronic formats as well:
kindle, e-pub, and pdf files. Of what use will my book be, as it begins to go
out of date as soon as it’s published? An example, I hope. I read, analyzed,
and interpreted the raw material on the web, and I hope to encourage students
to do the same as the wind energy field changes week by week – using my book,
along with the amazing electronic library we have at our fingertips.
Happy Summer Reading - whichever device you use!
2 comments:
You are done great job. I read your post; It is very informative and useful to us. I like your post. Keep sharing this type of nice and informative post.
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agreed. i can't imagine life without the internet. although trying to get my 73 old mother to understand the internet...i had to use the analogy of a library, book, page, isbn, card catalog...and she's finally getting the power of it.
smiles,
anna
http://davidlharrison.wordpress.com/2012/07/27/a-septet-posted-on-w-o-m/
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