January 24, 2021 Salty Air Publishing Newsletter

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January 24, 2021
In this issue:
Opening Note - Glass
One Last Lie - Paul Doiron
Expandable Foam Insulation
Independent Bookstores
A Bit for Benjamin Bunny
 

Opening Note - Glass

    I used to think that all my old house lacked was a magnificent view - the ever changing light on a mountain range, an ocean vista with waves the color of steel, or a raging river torrent, cascading over rocks. But beauty, as they say, is in the eye of the beholder. Sitting at my desk as I write, looking straight ahead, I have a view partially blocked by a large computer monitor. I can only see about a thirty inch by thirty inches of the window looking to the west. The sun rises every day on the other side of the house so what I see is the pointy gable of the house across the street and branches of the trees closely clustered behind it. And as the sun rises it paints those surfaces with distractingly awesome colors. And some mornings the moon sets through the trees, dripping down the side of the house across the street. And then I get further distracted by the ripples in the old glass. Someone once told me that those ripples were caused by the glass aging, moving ever downward as a sort of liquid. But that's not true, says  Michael Cima, Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and Faculty Director of the MIT Glass Lab.  Contrary to the urban legend that glass is a slow-moving liquid, it’s actually a highly resilient elastic solid, which means that it is completely stable. So those ripples, warps, and bull’s eye indentations in really old pieces of glass “were created when the glass was created,” Cima says. They are the result of old-fashioned glass fabrication methods, not aging. (MIT School of Engineering)
Well, he can take the magic out of the material but not out of the view across from my desk of the "dawn's early light".
 


Stay well,
Paul
Paul H. Raymer
P.S there's more to this newsletter  - please keep reading.
I want to offer an apology to Katharine Lee Bates. I misspelled her name in the January 10, 2021 issue. Thank you Jill Erickson from the Falmouth Public Library. I also want to let you know that the sign guys came back and reerected the sign. I wonder if they misspelled her name the first time as well! I also want to mention that an observant reader from across the pond quoted from the poem, "Confirm thy soul in self-control - Thy liberty in law" which is truly fitting.
One Last Lie - Paul Doiron

One Last Lie is the eleventh in the Mike Bowditch series by Paul Doiron. Mike is a Maine game warden but this book starts in Florida where Mike has been sent to perform his due diligence on the background for a new chief pilot for the Maine Warden Service.Mike’s friend, Charley Stevens, told him, “Never trust a man without secrets.” This is one of Doiron’s promises to the reader. He promises that he will tell us what the lie in the title means.He promises that he will tell us why Mike is in Florida and not Maine, and who the person might be that doesn’t have secrets. That’s a lot of promises before the reader makes it through the first paragraph.

Doiron is a solid storyteller and his books are a pleasure to read, and Mike is a wonderfully imperfect protagonist. Doiron follows through on those early promises and makes and answers a bunch more along the way. Mike seeks to find his friend and mentor, Charley, who has mysteriously professed to disappearing forever, leaving a note which in itself is mysterious.

There are some great lines like, "Florida is the world capital of unintended consequences”. And “My love for the old man was close to unconditional. But this day signaled the end of my apprenticeship. I had no doubt that Charley Stevens would continue to teach me life lessons, but only small boys and fools worship other men. The point of life is to find heroism in yourself.”

There are some great action scenes like in the Florida swamp wrestling with a gigantic python. Doiron puts Mike on an island in a rushing river where there seems to be no way out. Threats all around - to him, to his friend Charley, to a partially innocent bystander with an evil, Dudley Do-right character changing his skin from good guy to villain. Nature plays a role - as it should in the wilds of the Maine woods.

This is not a major Don Quixote fable, but it is a solid backwoods yarn. Mike does have problems with his girlfriends, and it seems that Doiron is undecided about which way to go with that issue. It reminds me of the Lovin’ Spoonful song Did you ever have to make up your mind? Say yes to one and leave the other behind. Mike finally ends the story by lying to himself. And that is the last lie.

 

 
Expandable Foam Insulation

I could get into the differences between open cell and closed cell foam insulation, talk about the different weights and 'R' values, but something that is never talked about is expandable foam as a weapon.

Early work with spray foam started with Fred Gusmer and Fred Werner who invented the first reliable spray foam machine call the FF. Gusmer developed the model C gun which became the Model D with dual heated hose assemblies that could be adjusted with a thermostat. The first hoses were high voltage (220VAC). Early spray foam machines had to be rigged by combining parts of various pumps and spray guns.

The first insulation projects were tanks and pipes in refineries, sealing up mine shafts in New Mexico and cold storage facilities.

Temperature can also be a problem. In an article in Sprayfoam Professional magazine from the Fall of 2018, Mason Knowles wrote, "In closed cell sprayfoam, exothermic heat is retained within the cell for longer periods of time. During the rise  process, exothermic heat is created that helps develop the cells. When installed properly, rising foam will reach temperatures of approximately 1600 F to 2000 F. But if the foam is installed in thickness greater than the manufacturer's recommendations, the temperature within the rising foam can exceed 3000 F. Under these circumstances, the foam will discolor and begin to scorch. In extreme circumstances, the foam can auto-ignite."

Foam technology has improved greatly since those early days and has proven to be an extremely reliable and effective way to insulate and air seal a house. But it requires training and skill to get it right. But imagine, if you will, a victim buried in closed cell spray foam insulation. Might make a good story. Stay tuned.

Independent Bookstores
   Where would we be without independent bookstores? We need to celebrate them. You can talk to people on Zoom or Teams or Go to Meeting, you can buy books electronically, but you can't touch them unless the are tangible. Libraries are also wonderful. But my mother (who lived and died before the electronic era) used to go off to her local Doubleday book store and come back with at least one shopping bag full of books.
We are blessed to have at least 21 bookstores on Cape Cod. This pandemic has been brutal to every brick and mortar business, and it hasn't been kind to bookstores. So I want to do what I can to celebrate them.
This is the Eight Cousins Bookstore on Main Street in Falmouth, a short distance from where I live. It started out as a children's bookstore (and my mother spent a fortune there on her grandchildren), but it's now a full service bookstore (the last remaining one) and it supports local authors and readers.

If you have a bookstore you like wherever it is in the world, send me a picture and few words about it, and I will celebrate it here. Thank you.
A Bit for Benjamin Bunny and the Rabbit Hole

Plottr Plottr is a tool for plotting! It is a tool for creating visual timelines like a digital corkboard where you can move your scenes and story lines around. I haven't tried it, but it looks like it might be a good tool for putting a plot together.

OneLook Dictionary search. If you want to find all sort of notations for a word, check this out. I plugged in 'mephitic' just to give it a shot and it found citations in 24 dictionaries. It provides words similar, usage examples, words that often appear near mephitic, rhymes, and invented words. Just the rhymes are amazing.

PhraseExpress is a text expander and autotext program.
“Expands a short piece of text into a longer text. Especially useful for writing difficult and long character names and placenames as well as for repetitive text sections in non-fiction books."

Submittable For keeping track of publishing opportunities. You can search the free marketplace for thousands of opportunities, creative calls, grants, fellowships, scholarships, residencies, and contests. I've heard from other writers that this is very useful for keeping track of submissions.

QueryTracker has a database of 1,694 literary agents. It will also organize and track your queries and it's listed by Writer's Digest as one of the 101 best websites for writers.

I would welcome feedback on any of these (or other sites and tools) that I can pass along. Thank you.


 
The Alliance of Independent Authors - Author Member
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