Free Download: The Day Detroit Went Dark
To celebrate and help promote The Day Detroit Went Dark audiobook, the Kindle version of The Day Detroit Went Dark will be a free download on Amazon.com starting December 24th through December 28th.
Here’s a few reviews:
As an ex-Detroiter I can assure you that if what happened in the book really did happen, this is about as close to what would happen without use of a crystal ball. Sadly the city of Detroit has been little more than a war zone for the last fifty years and it only gets worse with each passing decade. Mr.Silver has crafted a great and terrifying read. At once gut-wrenching and in some very small ways hopeful. I finished this in less than twenty four hours. Haven’t done that in a long time. Great book.
So nice to be pleasantly surprised when giving a book a chance! Not to say that this was a pleasant book! No. In fact, both the implications AND feasibility of the story is frightening to say the least! The storyline was smooth and non stop. Not lots of flowery filler. Every word necessary to moving the story along. The short length of the story was enough time to get to know and care about thanks to the author’s style.
The audiobook is here: http://www.amazon.com/The-Day-Detroit-Went-Dark/dp/B00HEFDJCK/ref=tmm_aud_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1361485307&sr=8-1
The Day Detroit Went Dark is also available on iTunes.
Thanks, everyone for making this book a success and Happy Holidays!
New Thomas Edison: RESURRECTOR Cover
I’ve refreshed the cover for Thomas Edison: RESURRECTOR since I felt it needed a change. Here it is:
I took the photograph inside Edison’s Menlo Park lab at Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan.
Also just got word that The System- A Detroit Story and The Day Detroit Went Dark are ‘headed for retail’ on Audible.com. They should appear on Audible any time now. The covers had to change, since Audible requires square covers (just like CDs) instead of rectangles.
Edison’s Lab and Phonograph Prototype
We went to Greenfield Village on Friday September 28th and I specifically wanted to revisit Edison’s Menlo Park lab. A lot of structures in Greenfield Village were carefully moved from their original sites and re-erected by Henry Ford’s staff. This is partially true with Menlo Park. Edison built his lab in 1876 and it served as the vanguard of industrial research labs. Ten years later it was completely abandoned. When Ford wanted to move the lab to Dearborn, he and Edison went to Menlo Park to find the buildings in ruins. Here’s a picture of the partially abandoned lab taken in 1880.
Ford had his staff recreate the lab from original material salvaged from the site. The rest of the lab was reconstructed and completed using photographs and drawings as de facto blueprints. Here’s what Edison’s lab looks like now:
Here’s an early Edison phonograph:
I used this exact prototype in the first chapter of Thomas Edison: RESURRECTOR. Note the delicate tin foil recording material on the right. The foil was wrapped around the recording cylinder and acoustic energy excited a diaphragm that held and vibrated a recording stylus in its center. The vibrating stylus etched the tin foil. When played back the etchings excited the diaphragm and reproduced the recorded sound. I’m still amazed that this all-mechanical device worked as well as it did.
Minutes and Seconds
Here’s a bit of trivia I read in an old calculus book. Why are seconds called seconds? Back in the Queen Elizabeth I days minutes needed to be further subdivided for more precise time measurements. One minute was therefore subdivided into 60 increments, and those were called “second minutes“. Soon, common speech dropped the minutes part and they were just called seconds. You never know what you will learn by picking up an old book…
Phobos-Grunt Crashes
The Russian Phobos-Grunt satellite crashed into the Pacific ocean off of Chile. I still love that name…
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