So this year is coming to a close, but a new one is on the way. Armies of the Polish Partitions 1770 - 1794 should be ariving in the next few weeks. I, of course, will give you an unbiased opinion when I get a copy. I think it's going to be great. Look for it on the Osprey Publishing website and all good book stores.
In the interim, I managed to release my edition of The Gallic Wars, a new edition of Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic Wars, full of information in the appendices sure to give you new insight on this classic by the man himself - G. Julius Caesar. You can find this at Wingedhussarpublishing.com as well as all booksellers and their websites.
I have a new one in the works that will be out in January - Frederick the Great's Instructions to His Generals. This is a new edition of Frederick's secret instructions to his officers written in the 1740's. As usual, I will have maps, glossaries, biographys and battles, all you need to understand the context of these orders and the background behind them. This will be available from Winged Hussar Publishing, LLC.
Writting an article I hope to present to Wargames Illustrated after the New Year relating to my Polish Armies book above called, Wargaming the Bar, information on creating a wargame scenario and armies for the battles during the Bar Confederation 1768 - 1772.
Monday, December 24, 2012
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Almost there time for a new one
Well, the book is cataloged and up on the Osprey website. You can see it here along with some of the illustrations they commissioned for the book.
http://www.ospreypublishing.com/store/Polish-Armies-of-the-Partitions-1770%E2%80%9394_9781849088558
Working up the artist notes, as I have said before is interesting. Essentially, you set the scene you want the artist to portray, provide as many notes on the uniforms that the artist will produce and then walk away. Yup, you have no further contact with the artist unless my editor came back with a question. You may think this odd, but really it is the most practical.
Artists are generally not like Michelangelo brooding over their work and taking years (well some are). Publishers can't wait indefinitely for the illustrations (some still do). Ideally, both side use the old carpenters adage of essentially measure twice and cut once. Once provide as thorough a description, get some sketches to make sure you are on the right track and give a deadline. When I sent the notes in I also provided a sketch of what I thought the scene should look like.
If you don't do this, the temptation is to tweak everything. When you are working on a cover for a book this might be possible. Many artists work on the computer this this is not as painful as it might seem. Still both sides want to be done and move on with the best product. So, I didn't see the final product till it was put up on the website - all in all I think they came out pretty well. I hope you like them.
So now I'm moving on to the next venture. I started an imprint called Winged Hussar Publishing LLC, you can see it at www.wingedhussarpublishing.com. I'm waiting till after the Polish Armies of the Partitions to come out before I do any other Polish history, so I am almost done working of an edition of Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic Wars.
I expect The Gallic Wars to be out as an e-book on the 26th of November. I was trying to get it out next week, but two weeks of delays from Sandy has hurt my schedule. A week later expect a paperback edition to be available. The Gallic Wars is edited and updated, meaning I have cleaned up a translation to make it readable to the modern ear, added maps, illustrations and a bunch of appendices dealing with people places and things of the period. If you have not read Caesar's commentaries, or not read it for a while this is a great opportunity for you. It is a fascinating work of the period and while Caesar does go on at time over the mundane, the picture he paints of the time and people is quite even handed.
http://www.ospreypublishing.com/store/Polish-Armies-of-the-Partitions-1770%E2%80%9394_9781849088558
Working up the artist notes, as I have said before is interesting. Essentially, you set the scene you want the artist to portray, provide as many notes on the uniforms that the artist will produce and then walk away. Yup, you have no further contact with the artist unless my editor came back with a question. You may think this odd, but really it is the most practical.
Artists are generally not like Michelangelo brooding over their work and taking years (well some are). Publishers can't wait indefinitely for the illustrations (some still do). Ideally, both side use the old carpenters adage of essentially measure twice and cut once. Once provide as thorough a description, get some sketches to make sure you are on the right track and give a deadline. When I sent the notes in I also provided a sketch of what I thought the scene should look like.
If you don't do this, the temptation is to tweak everything. When you are working on a cover for a book this might be possible. Many artists work on the computer this this is not as painful as it might seem. Still both sides want to be done and move on with the best product. So, I didn't see the final product till it was put up on the website - all in all I think they came out pretty well. I hope you like them.
So now I'm moving on to the next venture. I started an imprint called Winged Hussar Publishing LLC, you can see it at www.wingedhussarpublishing.com. I'm waiting till after the Polish Armies of the Partitions to come out before I do any other Polish history, so I am almost done working of an edition of Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic Wars.
I expect The Gallic Wars to be out as an e-book on the 26th of November. I was trying to get it out next week, but two weeks of delays from Sandy has hurt my schedule. A week later expect a paperback edition to be available. The Gallic Wars is edited and updated, meaning I have cleaned up a translation to make it readable to the modern ear, added maps, illustrations and a bunch of appendices dealing with people places and things of the period. If you have not read Caesar's commentaries, or not read it for a while this is a great opportunity for you. It is a fascinating work of the period and while Caesar does go on at time over the mundane, the picture he paints of the time and people is quite even handed.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
The Final Cover
Well, I finally got a copy of the final cover for Polish Armies of the partitions as you can see above. The artist did a great job and I can assure you the inside is just as well done. Yes, for those in the know, that is Tadeusz Kosciuszko on the right. Just three more months. Excitement abounds
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Ranks and Files
So, they have changed this on my again. Great fun. Anyway...
Finally saw the PDF of the book with illustrations laid out. Made the last changes and it has gone off to the printer.
Here is one of the images that didn't make it into the book. I will make it available as a PDF download as soon I figure out how to do it. This is the rank badges for the Polish Army 1765 - 1794. Till then..
Finally saw the PDF of the book with illustrations laid out. Made the last changes and it has gone off to the printer.
Here is one of the images that didn't make it into the book. I will make it available as a PDF download as soon I figure out how to do it. This is the rank badges for the Polish Army 1765 - 1794. Till then..
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Just a quick update to remind you I still care
I went through a bunch of corrections on all the city names we list in the book. Many of them are listed as they were in the old Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Of course today, those cities, towns and villages are split between four different countries - so of which have renamed them. The long and the short of it is I double checked the spelling, tracked down the name today and will make a gazetteer available on-line if you want to track them down.
Mike Ramalho at Osprey tells me "Polish Armies of the Partitions" is now in their next catalogue that should be printed for August - still have to wait till January 2013 to receive a copy. Still, exciting times. For those of you unfamiliar with the work of the artist, Raffaele Ruggeri, he is an A+ military artist and I am very happy to have been paired with him.
I have a couple of short articles on the Warlord site for the Persian, Assyrians and Babylonian armies. Here is a link for the Persian to take a look:
http://www.warlordgames.com/22771/the-early-achaemenid-persian-army-550-bc-%E2%80%93-450-bc/
Keep an eye here for more information soon.
Mike Ramalho at Osprey tells me "Polish Armies of the Partitions" is now in their next catalogue that should be printed for August - still have to wait till January 2013 to receive a copy. Still, exciting times. For those of you unfamiliar with the work of the artist, Raffaele Ruggeri, he is an A+ military artist and I am very happy to have been paired with him.
I have a couple of short articles on the Warlord site for the Persian, Assyrians and Babylonian armies. Here is a link for the Persian to take a look:
http://www.warlordgames.com/22771/the-early-achaemenid-persian-army-550-bc-%E2%80%93-450-bc/
Keep an eye here for more information soon.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Armies on Parade
Well, my editor has come back with some final changes, and the artist assigned finished the color illustrations. I've been working on armies based on parts of the book. The first unit is the Crown Guard infantry circa 1770. The figures are Eureka figures based on the Saxon 1763 range. The grenadiers are from Triangle miniatures and the flags are based on drawings in the upcoming book. Next up is a unit of Bar Confederation and Russian Infantry.
I've started working on a book covering the Polish Legions 1795 - 1807. This will cover the the Legions in Italy, the Demi-brigades sent to Santo Domingo, The Northern Legion, Vistula Legion and some odd bits and pieces. More on that as it develops.
I've started working on a book covering the Polish Legions 1795 - 1807. This will cover the the Legions in Italy, the Demi-brigades sent to Santo Domingo, The Northern Legion, Vistula Legion and some odd bits and pieces. More on that as it develops.
Monday, June 4, 2012
I can adapt to change. I think I do pretty well with it, but I'm not a fan of sudden change. The log-in for Blogspot seems to have changed so that it took me a few minutes to get back to familiar ground. It happens, I swear in one of the several languages I know how to swear in and move on. Not everything is that easy. I also know that the next time I log-in I will also forget what I did to get back here and so I will repeat the above. I guess I need to log-in more often.
So, that brings me to the next topic. I have several projects running at the same time now. Working on a book on the Polish Legions 1795 - 1808. This will entail the Italian Legions, the demi-brigades in French Service, The Legion of the North and the Vistula Legion. I may take it through 1815 since the Vistula Legions were reorganized after the retreat from Moscow. I am also cleaning up some translations I did while researching the Polish Armies of the Partitions and doing some work on a Roman history. I may be publishing some of these through a company called Winged Hussar Publishing - but more on that at a later date.
So, if I haven't mentioned it lately, Polish Armies of the Partitions 1770 - 1794, is now available for pre-order on Amazon, B&N.com and all good bookstore. This does not ship until December, but don't wait. Click now!! Or if you prefer to browse, run (just not with scissors) to your local store. Sorry this is what I do - shameless shill for myself and my associates.
So, that brings me to the next topic. I have several projects running at the same time now. Working on a book on the Polish Legions 1795 - 1808. This will entail the Italian Legions, the demi-brigades in French Service, The Legion of the North and the Vistula Legion. I may take it through 1815 since the Vistula Legions were reorganized after the retreat from Moscow. I am also cleaning up some translations I did while researching the Polish Armies of the Partitions and doing some work on a Roman history. I may be publishing some of these through a company called Winged Hussar Publishing - but more on that at a later date.
So, if I haven't mentioned it lately, Polish Armies of the Partitions 1770 - 1794, is now available for pre-order on Amazon, B&N.com and all good bookstore. This does not ship until December, but don't wait. Click now!! Or if you prefer to browse, run (just not with scissors) to your local store. Sorry this is what I do - shameless shill for myself and my associates.
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