Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!mnetor!uunet!seismo!sundc!texsun!sun!plaid!chuq From: chuq%plaid@Sun.COM (Chuq Von Rospach) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Fall Announcments: Macintosh Books Message-ID: <25757@sun.uucp> Date: Mon, 17-Aug-87 03:12:28 EDT Article-I.D.: sun.25757 Posted: Mon Aug 17 03:12:28 1987 Date-Received: Tue, 18-Aug-87 02:21:00 EDT Sender: news@sun.uucp Lines: 138 Every six months, Publisher's Weekly has a special jumbo issue chock full of advertisements by all the publishers pushing the major books of the next six months (460 pages worth, this time!). I've waded through them, and parsed out the books I think are of interest to folks. My apologies in advance for typing errors, errors of omission, etc. A few notes: first, some titles aren't pushed in the ads or other material in PW. Second, not all publishers mark their genre books (or mark them incorrectly -- Asimov, for instance is a mainstream author as far as Doubleday is concerned. Because of this, I'm sure I missed stuff either because I didn't recognize the title, the author, or because the publisher didn't mention it. Also, dates vary by publisher. Generally, hardcovers show up in the month shown as a published date (or slightly before). Paperbacks show up the latter half of the month before. Schedules are subject to change without notice of course, and books will be late or cancelled at the whim of the publisher. I can name at least six books announced for the Macintosh six months ago that disappeared without a trace, excluding the ones on DBase Mac (which ALSO disappeared without a trace, taking the books with it). Some publishers are less rigorous with their schedules than others: Donning/Starblaze, for instance, should be trusted only after a book hits the stores. This edition of the announcements is rushed, since I want to get it out before I split for worldcon. So if things are out of order or typoed, I hope you understand. It was sloppy or a month late. Hope this is of use to you folks! This listing brought to you courtesy of Fictional Reality, Ultd, publishers of OtherRealms, the bleeding fingers of Chuq Von Rospach, and Publisher's Weekly, collator of 460 pages of tiny type and author's pictures. Unless otherwise noted, books are paperbacks. [comments in swquare brackets are by me.] Fall Announcements -- Macintosh/Computer [the Mac book industry seems to have collapsed on itself a bit -- this list is about half the size of the Spring list, but don't feel bad -- a good chunk of the spring list turned into vaporware [at least three books on Word, one on Ready Set Go, a bunch on pagemaker and random other stuff simply never showed as far as I can tell: on top of the books on dBase and other vaporware products. Probably for the best. Desktop publishing has eased off significantly, although there are too many "best thing since slived bread" books out already. It looks like the next place for lemming publishing and vaporbooks is OS/2, which is fine by me. Pricing is edging up in techincal/Mac books, to $19.95 for a standard trade paperback. Some books hit the $21.95 of $24.95 mark as well, with hardcovers higher. My guess is that most new books will be at $21.95 within a year. Sigh.] Addison-Wesley The Apple Techincal Library Desiging Cards and Drivers for the Macintosh II and Macintosh SE. Apple Computer, Inc. September, #24.95 hardback Techincal Introduction to the Macintosh Family. Apple Computer, Inc. October, $19.95 trade paperback Macintosh Family Hardware Reference. Apple computer, Inc. October, $24.95 hardcover Programmers Introduction to the Macintosh Family, Apple computer, Inc. November, $24.95 hardcover Inside Macintosh, Volume V. Apple computer, Inc. Devember, $26.95 paperback. Macintosh Programming Secrets, Scott Knaster, October, $24.95. [this book is probably a must buy] Bantam Programming with Macintosh Programmers Workshop. Joel W. West. $29.95 trade paperback, September. [this name sounds vaguely familiar] How to get the most out of compuserve, third edition. charles Bowen & David Peyton. $19.95 trade paperback, October. The Offical Print Shop Handbook: Ideas, tips and Designs for the Home, School and Professional Use. Randi Benton and Mary Schenk Balcer. $16.95 trade paperback, November. Crown Publishing Free (and Almost Free) Software for the Macintosh. Robert Eckhard. $19.95 trade paperback, August. diLithium press book. Dow Jones-Irwin Desktop Publishing, Macintosh Edition. Frederic Davis& John BArry. $24.95, October. Newsletter publishing with Pagemaker, Macintosh Edition. Frederic Davis and John Barry, $24.95, January. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich The Well Connected Macintosh. Tony Bove and Cheryl Rodes. "Forward by John Scully" $11.95, November. Microsoft Press The Apple Macintosh Book, 3rd Edition. Cary Lu. $21.95. January. [Microsoft books seems to have completely forgotten the Mac again. sigh. I'm still waiting for a decent in-depth book on word 3.0x -- the manuals don't count, since they're basically unreadable.] Brady Computer Books Turbo Pascal for the Mac. Paul Goodman and Alan Zeldin. $19.95, November. Encyclopedia Mac Rom. Keith Mathews and Jay Friedland. $29.95, january. Word 3.0 on the Mac: A guide to power and performance. Tim Knight. $19.95 trade paper, January [is this the power Word book I'm looking for?] Working with dBase Mac: Mastering the Database Environment. Rusel DeMaria & George Fontaine. $19.95, February [if, of course, dBase Mac really exists by then....] Howard W. Sams & Company. DBase Mac Programmer's Reference Guide. Edward C. Jones. $19.95. [it must be fun to spend a year writing a book for a product that refuses to ship...] Chuq Von Rospach chuq@sun.COM Delphi: CHUQ We live and learn, but not the wiser grow -- John Pomfret (1667-1703)