An iIllustrated History
			 
			 
			
		
		
		Sorry George, it was the 'Geo' signature that threw me. Perhaps you have been 
calling yourself that for a while, and I did not pick it up. 
 
My 'subject to an agreed brief' is an advertising loophole of sorts that 
allows me to back out when the going gets too tough. 
 
I have produced magazines, but not books, although the designers I work with 
have done so.  
 
Once a template is agreed to, flowing text and images is not as hard as it 
sounds. For a very, very beautiful book, an enormous amount of pickiness is 
needed, and this adds time and money. Especially if you get supplied 
inferior photos and the like. No one would want to take that on as an unpaid 
job, unless of course you knew the book would be printed beautifully 
(expensively). 
 
Which is why we need to establish just 'how big' this book might be, and why 
I made reference to an encyclopedia like Professor Bury's. 
 
I don't entirely agree with you on the idea of contributions. We have some 
very able writers among us. Some are pedants, others polemists.  Thor is an 
engineer by training, Claude an historian. There is no reason an essay on 
the BMW legacy can't sit side by side with a discussion on how to pull apart 
an engine. Moreover, a contribution by Mr Crook might end up the most 
valuable part of the book, but might not fit with one that had been 
intended, say, to be a manual on restoration. I suppose it's a question of 
when to stop. 
 
I hope the 'poisoned chalice' comment was in jest, I certainly meant no more 
than to point out how easy it seems to be in the Bristol world to get 
people's backs up. You know I have nothing but reverence for our esteemed 
BEEF founder.  
 
In short, there is no way, in my opinion, that this suggested book would not 
be big and painful to produce. That in no way should deter us from 
considering or attempting it. 
 
But as my escape exit 'subject to an agreed brief' suggests, I can see that 
a badly scoped book could take years to finish and destroy a lot of online 
friendships. 
 
The funniest, and most unintended, product of the internet world is of 
course a complete disregard for loyalty. You can commit to something online, 
and then completely, utterly, snark-like, vanish away. It might be something 
worth factoring in when we attempt to write a book with online authors. 
 
 
Peter 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
			
			
			
			
				 
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
				
			
			
			
		 
	
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