Extra, extra [1]! Read
all about it! We are delighted to
announce that the first formal publications of the Freshwater Gastropods of North
America Project are now available for purchase from all the usual online
outlets, as well from the publisher at a substantial discount.
Buy all four from the author's profile page |
Volume 1, by Dillon, Ashton, Reeves, Smith, Stewart and
Watson, reports the results of the largest-scale inventory of freshwater snails
ever conducted in the United States. We have reviewed and synthesized
macrobenthic collections taken by ten natural resource agencies, malacological
holdings at eight museums, and our own original collections from hundreds of
sites, covering all freshwater gastropod habitat in Atlantic drainage systems
from Georgia to the New York line. For each of the 70 species and subspecies we
provide:
- A dichotomous key for identification.
- Full-color figures.
- Range maps at county scale.
- Notes on habitat, ecology, life history, and reproductive biology.
- Systematic and taxonomic updates to modern standards.
Volumes 2, 3, and 4 are collections of essays, originally
appearing in the present blog 2003 – 2019, now edited and rearranged
thematically. Volume 2 collects 29
essays on the systematics and evolution of the freshwater pulmonates of North
America, Volume 3 comprises 37 essays on the systematics and evolution of the
prosobranchs, and Volume 4 collects 38 essays reviewing ecological and
biogeographical themes. These volumes
are intended to support and augment the scientific results reported in Volume
1.
The retail prices for the four individual volumes are
$39.95, $34.95, $35.45, and $35.45, respectively. Although not unreasonable for 250-page glossy
color paperbacks in this day and age, I don’t mind telling you that the method
by which those retail prices were determined irritated me considerably. The figures were essentially dictated by
amazon.com as the lowest possible sticker-price that would yield $1.00 for the
FWGNA [4]. All the rest of the sale
either goes to my publisher (Bookbaby) or to Amazon for its marketing services.
So then immediately after the volumes hit the market a
couple days ago, Amazon began advertising cut-rate prices. For Volume 1 today, the amazon.com site is
listing “10 used from $34.66” and “21 new from $32.61.” I do not understand this phenomenon at all.
Here’s the bottom line.
I would encourage you all to cut out the online retailing giants, and
purchase FWGNA Volumes 1 – 4 directly from the publisher’s website. The FWGNA Project [5] will receive a
substantially larger fraction of the sale.
And as an inducement, I have arranged with Bookbaby to sell
the entire four-volume set for the discount price of $99.95. That’s a savings of $45.85 to you, and
everybody wins, except Jeff Bezos.
Follow this simple three-step process:
- Go to my Author Profile Page [here].
- Add all four titles as listed at the bottom of that page to your shopping cart.
- Apply the coupon code FWGNA4 to each volume.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, each of the four volumes features a
fairly extensive acknowledgement section.
But in addition to those lengthy lists of explicit appreciations, I do
want to thank the entire readership of the FWGNA Blog for your support and help
over the 20-year gestation of this project.
I have received quite a few helpful comments and suggestions from you
all over the history of this forum, sometimes by direct email, other times
anonymously commented. I prefer the
former, but appreciate have always appreciated all input, regardless of
provenance.
Notes
[1] No, this is not an “Extra extra.” As I understand it, an “Extra” was a second
run of a daily newspaper, printed to update the readership on some breaking
news. And an “Extra extra” was a third
printing. So, blog posts aren’t
printed. And even if the present text
should ultimately appear in print, which is, after all, one of the primary
messages being conveyed in the blog post above, it cannot possibly be extra in
any sense. This is the first run of the
blog for April of 2019. I’m sorry, I
just like the sound of “Extra, extra.”
[2] For more on the objective system of incidence ranking
piloted by the FWGNA project, see:
- Pleurocera shenandoa n.sp. [11Mar19]
[5] And perhaps you remember, the FWGNA Project is a sole
proprietorship of Rob Dillon. So I admit
that the distinction between the FWGNA and Rob Dillon is a fine one. But important. For more, see:
- Twenty years of FWGNA [11July18]
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