Friday, August 31, 2018

Patty Jansen's promotion: all books 99 cents

It's that time again!  :D





All books are 99 cents.  My own Mind Games is one of the featured titles.  Here's your chance to get it and save three bucks.

These promotions are a great way to give new authors a try without spending a lot of money.  Take a second to visit the promotion's web site and browse the selection.  Independent authors don't have the resources of publishing houses to market their books, so these sorts of promotions are vital.  Please consider supporting their work.

Thanks!

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Ammo is expensive

Thinking about those 4200 cases of .303-caliber ammunition aboard the Lusitania got me to thinking about how much it would cost to similarly equip myself in this day and age.  Those rounds were made by Remington UMC, so let's find some similar stuff.

At this site, a 20-round box is going for $20.95.  They only have five boxes left, so there's no discount for buying by the 1000-round case.  Usually, though, ammo sellers offer you a discount if you buy a case.  We'll be generous and assume our hypothetical discount would be a whole dollar off, making the price $19.95 per box for a case price of $997.5.  An ammo mountain like the one found on the Lusitania would then run us just over four million dollars.

Yikes.  :o

And that's the best price for Remington .303 I found.

Hmm...

You know, we don't have to go with the Remington brand.  There are cheaper alternatives out there that will work just as well in an Enfield rifle.  Let's shop around.

Ah, here we go.  British surplus, so it'll have corrosive primers, and that means you'll need to pour some boiling water down your rifle's barrel when you're done shooting.  If you leave those corrosive salts in there, they'll rust and pit your barrel.  But this is the cheapest stuff I can find.  If you buy a whole 1000-round crate, then it'll run $250 even.  4200 crates would cost $1,050,000.  And you get this cool and historical wooden box, too:



If you're not familiar with surplus ammunition, it's basically decades-old stuff that governments decide they don't want anymore, so they dump it on the civilian market.  You can get ammunition made in a variety of countries, including the now-defunct Soviet Union.  It's often 1950s, 60s, or 70s vintage, but you can purchase rounds made as early as the 1930s if you look around.  And governments are pretty good at sealing that stuff up against the elements, so it should all still work, though it might be a bit tarnished.  Also, surplus almost always has corrosive primers, and the whole benefit of that is that they last longer in storage.  Non-corrosive ammo has a shorter shelf life.

But let's suppose you don't have time to hose down your rifle after shooting.  You're price-sensitive, so you still can't afford the dollar-a-round brands, but you'd also prefer to stick with non-corrosive ammo.  In that case, steel-cased or bi-metal cartridges are what you want.

Here's the best deal I found.  It comes in lots of 280, but doing the math works out to $389.50 for every thousand rounds.  Multiply that by 4200 and our ammo mountain will cost us $1,635,900.

So there you have it.  No matter how you slice it, the Lusitania was carrying over a million bucks (in 2018 prices) worth of .303.  At this site, there are a couple of photos of a few of the rounds that were recovered from the wreck.

By the way... 4.2 million rounds was a drop in the bucket compared to the number of rounds fired during the war.  I've seen estimates of over a billion rounds of .303 fired by the British.  And that's just one caliber from one country.  The amount of men and resources squandered in that war is simply staggering.  And we're still feeling the effects today.

Anyway... R.I.P., Lusitania victims, and R.I.P. to all you poor brave men of World War I.  :(

Browsing through the Lusitania's manifest

The real one, I mean, not the redacted one.  The one that's got all the juicy, naughty stuff listed.  An optical scan is available online now:




Also, here's a link about the munitions that were illegally aboard:




The manifest includes a shipment of copper wire from J. R. Livermore to some place in Lancashire.  I tried looking up J. R. Livermore, but my Google Fu must be weak, because all I found was this photo of an apparent wife:




She's at the "Astor tableaux," which was a fancy party for New York elites.  The women dressed in leopard print costumes and acted out Greek plays.  Strange how this woman was important enough to get invited to exclusive parties attended by the wealthiest elites of New York society, and yet her husband languishes in obscurity.  If anyone knows anything about the J. R. Livermore who had cargo aboard the Lusitania, please let me know.




The Germans claimed the Lusitania was a fair target due to the war materiel she carried.  The British said there were no munitions on board.  The Germans were right, of course.  We have the full manifest, courtesy of the folks at the Franklin Roosevelt Presidential Library, and it's all right there.  The British were smuggling weapons and other contraband into a war zone in flagrant violation of U.S. and international law.

Anyway, I found the scan of the manifest and thought I'd share.  It's a neat piece of a dark moment in history.

Monday, August 27, 2018

Newsletter builder

I've joined a magnet group for the purpose of adding newsletter subscribers.  I've never done anything like this before, so I'm kind of fumbling my way through it.  Hopefully I won't do anything knuckleheaded to screw it up.

If it works as hoped, then I'll end up with a few more subscribers and, ideally, paying fans.

Anyway, I'll have more details later.

In other news, I've been informed that free books aren't going to appear on Walmart's website as a matter of policy.  So Clouds of Venus won't show up there until I take it off the free list at Kobo.  It's frustrating, but there's not much I can do about it.  I'll probably set it back to paid.  Only at Kobo, though.  I'll leave it free everywhere else.  On the plus side, setting it to paid will mean I can use Kobo's in-house promotions for it, and free downloads of the book have been sparse anyway.  Maybe it'll work out for the best.

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Stuck on a scene

Gah!  I hate getting stuck like this.  I'm trying to add a scene into the book, and I keep deleting paragraphs and trying again.  I feel like I've accomplished nothing today.

On the plus side, I had an idea for a side story set in the Wheel of Fire universe.  Took a few notes.  If I ever get around to writing "bonus material" stuff, then I've got a starting point.

I had a long blog post written last night, but I scrapped it.  I don't know why, but it just didn't feel right.  I'm starting to wonder about myself here.  The last thing I need is to get frozen into inaction due to some psychological hangup relating to my self-confidence.


UPDATE:  I got the scene hammered out.  My brain finally found the mood I didn't know I was trying to set, and it's done.  Onward with the revision.

Water-cooled machine guns vs. xenomorphs

Are water-cooled machine guns still useful?  I think so, but only in limited cases.  I wouldn't use them in an offensive capacity.  But as part of defensive fortifications?  Sure, why not?  Think of the robot sentry guns from Aliens. 







That's the sort of situation I'm thinking about where water-cooling might add efficiency.  Throw in an ammo feed system that can deliver many thousands of rounds without reloading belts or changing magazines or something, and your robot guns can hold those corridors all day long.

Colonial Marines, let's make this happen.  :D

Friday, August 24, 2018

The new Gmail

...loads slower than the old one.

😐

In other news, I think I'll try writing some flash fiction in runes.  ᚵᚯᛑ ᛁᛑᛂᛆ, ᚱᛁᛏ?