Did Louis H. Watson write one, two or three books on bridge??
"samsloan" schrieb im Newsbeitrag
...
On Mar 18, 6:44 pm, Jürgen R. wrote:
"samsloan" schrieb im
...
The two Watson books were both published in 1934. It is not possible
to determine which was published first because they both cite the
other one.
However, there is a big difference between them. "Watson on the Play
of the Hand at Contract Bridge" is 492 pages, a very dense book. It
only deals with the play of the hand.
"The Outline of Contract Bridge" by Watson in only 348 pages and only
147 of those pages deal with the play of the hand. The rest of the
book is about bidding on the "Honor Tricks" system which is of course
obsolete (I think).
What most have probably read is the updated version of "Watson on the
Play of the Hand at Contract Bridge" updated by Sam Fry in 1958 and
several times thereafter. Sam Fry was often the partner of Watson.
I have both of the 1934 books in hard cover mint condition. I plan to
reprint both of them. I cannot touch the Sam Fry updates because the
copyrights are current on those.
The introduction to "Watson on the Play of the Hand at Contract
Bridge" by Oswald Jacoby states that Watson never made a mistake in
the play of the hand. You heard that right. Watson never made a
mistake. Remarkable. The only other person I ever heard of who never
made a mistake was me.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Sam Sloan
Yes, I do have a suggestion: You do not hold the copyright for the Watson
books and they are not in the public domain.
Therefore, if you are not a thief you will not 'publish' these books.
Of course, you are not publishing a book in the normal sense of the word -
you are running of copies and having them
glued together at a 'publish-on-demand' shop, which is also illegal.
You are in Germany and German law is different. From what I
understand, copyrights never expire in Germany.
As to the quality of my books, you have obviously never seen one of
them. My books are of the highest production quality anywhere, far
better than anything now available in Europe.
Sam Sloan
When Sloan makes an assertion it is a good bet that it
is nonsense.
I am not in Germany and where I am is irrelevant.
Copyright expires in Germany and many other countries 70 years
after the death of the originator.
The quality of copy-shop books is such that the spine often cracks
when the book is first opened and the book falls apart after a single
reading.
600 dpi is very low quality for print fonts (see Donald Knuth on this
subject)
and copying introduces many flaws independent of the resolution.
Registration with the Copyright Office is not a precondition for copyright
protection.
You have also copied Chess books that are under Russian Copyright, e.g.
Kasparyan, and it is nearly impossible to determine who the Copyright
holder is. However, it is certain that you have no right whatsoever to these
books. It looks very much like you are a common thief.
Sooner or later you will get sued. In the meantime you will make a couple of
bucks
by ripping off the buyers as well as the Copyright owners.
Sloan, you are a dung beetle.
|