There can always be a second edition.  I wonder what would happen if you 
approached a publisher with what you have already and asked them if they would 
be interested in guiding you to  publishing a longer (and more lucrative) 
second edition.  Publishers (in the old days, anyway) love a bird in hand.  

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

 <http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Frank Wimberly
Sent: Wednesday, August 02, 2017 6:32 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Legado de Nuevo Mexico

 

Al contrario Steve.  A usted gracias!

 

Once I said to Reuben Hersh that I was inhibited about writing to John Baez to 
ask questions about his book on mathematical physics (Gauge Fields, Knots and 
Gravity). Reuben said that authors love to get comments and questions about 
their books. Now I understand.  If you don't receive such communications you 
have a feeling that you have thrown a bottle containing a note into the ocean.  
Hence my feeling that I am the one who owes you thanks.

 

As for metaphors, I did say that Norman Crider was like a fish out of water.  
But I guess that's a simile.  

 

I still do own firearms but I haven't fired them for decades except once when I 
shot a gopher with a .22 short from my study window. Anyone who has a garden 
around here will understand.

 

It's interesting that you would have liked more anecdotes.  I could have made 
the book twice as long but I thought that would make  it boring and I was in a 
hurry for fear of becoming disabled before it was published.  Irrational, I 
know.

 

Thanks too for the plan to pass the book along to your friend.

 

Frank

 

Frank Wimberly
Phone (505) 670-9918

 

 

On Aug 2, 2017 4:04 PM, "Steven A Smith" <sasm...@swcp.com 
<mailto:sasm...@swcp.com> > wrote:

Frank and Congregation -

I finally checked my USPS mail today and discovered that the copy of your 
memoir on your NM legacy had arrived from Amazon.

Uncharacteristically I sat down over a long lunch of Huevos Rancheros (Xmas, 
over easy, extra garnish in place of rice/beans) and quaffed the entire book in 
a single sitting (with about 4 ice-tea chasers).

I gave up looking for metaphors in your very matter-of-fact chronicle.  As 
predicted, the metaphors I did find were precisely the conceptual ones which I 
believe all language is built upon (as per Lakoff/Johnson, et al)...  not a bit 
of figurative language discovered!

I definitely enjoyed the romp through your memory and the eclectic mix of your 
West/East coast life with your earliest/latest years in Nuevomexico among 
communities and relatives of Spanish, Mexican, and Native ancestry.    As you 
know from some of our conversations, I was born/raised among communities where 
Natives and Spanish speakers were significant and sometimes dominant.  I do not 
have my own blood roots in the southwest as you do, and being about 15 years 
your junior, my experiences were a little different, but not entirely.  I 
prowled my rurality with both a spring-BB gun and an air rifle but graduated to 
archery over high-powered rifles in my teens, having noticed that I didn't 
really want to kill animals (or people).   I am probably the only member of my 
grade school who doesn't still own/shoot guns for fun.

I appreciated your observation about how multilinguals often reserve one 
language for one mode of interaction vs another.

I was so drawn in by your history that I wanted more details and anecdotes.  
I'm sure the audience is small enough for this book and that one chronicling 
more of your technical education/interests/background would have a smaller 
audience, but I for one wanted to let you know I appreciated it.   I saw your 
sales rank is around 227,000 when I *think* it was 660,000 when I ordered.   
This is something like a divide-by-zero situation I suspect?

I will pass your book on to a very good friend of mine who is your contemporary 
(also 1943) born/raised in NM/TX panhandle, visiting Los Alamos summers where 
an uncle worked.   He worked the switch yards on the railroads as a college 
student, had a classmate who "commuted" from school to vacations home "out 
west" by jumping boxcars.   Getting pulled by a big Eastern University (MIT) 
and joining the workforce in the 60's as an "analyst" on big mainframes with 
degrees in math/architecture.    He will definitely appreciate a number of your 
early experiences.

Thanks for the book,

 - Steve



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