In the
time I've been writing this blog, I have shied away from doing book
reviews, because I want this blog to tell you what's going on in MY
shop. But sometimes, what's going on in my shop is that I'm reading,
to help jog my memory about a technique or construction method or
tool setup that I want to use. For me, woodworking and reading about
it have always been paired activities which make each other more
interesting and rewarding. It's about time I shared some of my
thoughts on a few books, blogs and magazines.
I
Some
Books I Like
In
1998 and 1999, Cambium Press (later taken over by Linden Press)
issued four books by Ian Kirby: The Accurate Router, The Accurate Table Saw, Sharpening with Waterstones,
and The Complete Dovetail. These books are physically
different from typical woodworking books, with a smaller format: 6 by
9 inches and 140 pages, compared with 9 by 12 and around 200 pages
for most woodworking offerings from publishers like Taunton,
Sterling, Fox Chapel, Popular Woodworking; and other titles from
Cambium/Linden. So they're half the usual size, but also half the
usual price, at $14.95. I like them all, and they're among the books
I recommend students in my classes read.
The
illustrations are all
black and white, but both photographs and
drawings clearly illustrate what's being shown in the text. These
books are also unusual in that despite their brevity, they cover
their topics well, and do it by avoiding the typical “survey”
approach, in which multiple methods are shown for each job to be
done. For example, in the sharpening book, which I'm re-reading
today, Kirby shows one way, and only one way, to sharpen hand tools
for woodworking. He uses a bench grinder to make a low-angle main
bevel, followed by waterstones to produce a higher-angle, polished,
working bevel. He shows how to make and use a jig system for the
bench grinder, including tool holders for plane irons, chisels, and
spokeshave irons. He includes plans for freestanding and outrigger
versions of a waterstone sharpening station. He shows how to sharpen
knives, scissors, and carving gouges. There's nothing about drills,
router bits, or other power-tool blades.
Kirby's
methods aren't always typical of what other authors recommend, but
his recommendations are based on his training in the British Arts and
Crafts tradition, followed by decades of experience as a woodworker
and teacher. So even when it's idiosyncratic, his
advice is sound and will lead to good results arrived at in a safe
manner. You won't learn about every possible type of sharpening stone
and every honing jig that's ever been made, but if you follow this
book's instructions you will consistently prepare a blade sharp
enough to do fine work. If you're not curious about sharpening, you
could go through your whole woodworking life and never read another
book about it, and be just fine.
II
How
Some People Read Woodworking Books
If you
disagree with some aspect of Kirby's method, you might take it as an
excuse to dismiss his entire book. For instance, the partially
hollow-ground bevel his method produces is not a good idea for
Japanese chisels and planes, which have laminated blades. Many
writers seem to relish this approach to other authors' work, seeking
out any deviation from their own orthodoxy and trumpeting
maledictions against the blasphemers & idolaters in the public
square. Cast out the abomination! This is the least enjoyable aspect
of reading and writing about woodworking. Despite all the good the
internet has done for woodworking, this zealotry in small things is
something I'm not grateful for. Both the anonymous trolls of Redditi
and some of the most prominent, respected, and gifted teachers and
woodworkers are guilty of it. I still read all I can, but it's hard
work when a writer who has lots of great ideas that they can express
well seems unable to write about anything but the error of others'
ways.
III
Adapting,
Adopting, Copying, and Plagiarizing
Other
writers (and publishers) take the opposite approach. Instead of
trying to tear down what other writers have built, they show up with
tape measures, notebooks, and cameras. Then what they look at appears
in something they publish later. Sometimes this doesn't really
matter. If Tage Frid mentioned in his book that the butyrate handles
on Stanley and Record chisels are really tough, even if they are
extremely ugly, it doesn't do any wrong to say the same thing in your
book, blog, or article - - as long as you believe it too! It will
even help you make your case stronger if you add “Tage Frid said
this way back in 1980, and it's still true!”
Sometimes,
this is great! There's real value in the improvement that comes by finding something excellent in a book and adapting your own
methods to it, practicing it a while, making it your own, and then
sharing it with the world.
On the
other hand, if you are about to publish a book on bandsaws, and you
take a recent, successful book about bandsaws to the photocopy
machine, and publish a bandsaw book designed by someone else and
traced over by you, people will notice and think less of your book.
If this behavior reaches a certain level, the lawyers will be called
in.
Most
cases are far less clear-cut. For instance, what if you see a cool
concept in a book you like,
and
build something like it to include in a book that's published 6 years
later?
I
wonder if anyone else has ever noticed this little example. Each book
is wonderful in its own way. I'm glad I own them both. I'm not
calling anyone a plagiarist or a victim, but this sort of thing bugs
me a little bit because of my own training. In another life, decades
ago, I trained to be a literary scholar. When I see something like
this, my training kicks in and I simultaneously 1) flip the page
around looking for the citation and 2) say to myself “Aha!
Intertextuality! I have caught a concept sneaking from one text into
another, possibly using an author's brain as vector!” Since
examples like this are unacknowledged in the text, the intertextual
link is made by the reader. This a stellar example of that
poststructural condition in which the author is dead and the
author-function is assumed by the reader . . . all because an author
(or editor) didn't acknowledge where an idea came from.
That's
a roundabout way of suggesting that woodworking writers ought to
acknowledge the sources of our ideas more often (when we know them,
anyway). Why? To give us all a clearer understanding of how connected
woodworkers all are, and how much we all owe to our teachers.
Why
don't we? My best guess is that there are two main reasons. For one,
we fear that there's a finite amount of attention available for
woodworking books and blogs and magazines. That being so, admitting
that a) not every single thing we write or teach is an idea that
originated with us, and b) we read other writers' work, suggests to
our readers that maybe their valuable time and money should go
elsewhere. The other reason that occurs to me is that publishers need to
produce a steady stream of fresh, new material, and so the notion of
using the current book to recommend that readers look in older,
pre-existing books is not revenue-effective. After all, a new book on
whatever topic is coming out soon - - why make the potential audience
for that smaller?
Here
is the crux of the issue. Woodworking is a relatively stable, finite
body of information. Wood is wood, and its properties aren't
changing. The tools remain basically the same, with occasional
refinements and improvements. Same goes for procedures: they're
determined by the fixed nature of the material, the relatively static
arsenal of tools we bring to bear on it, and also a historically stable set of
results we're trying for. So there are refinements, but in order to
constantly offer up fresh “content” in the form of books and
magazine articles and blog posts, there has to be lots of repetition.
Wouldn't the repetition be easier to take if authors and publishers
took a moment to acknowledge where they learned, what they learned,
and how they've changed it to adapt to their own needs? I think it
would make my reading much more interesting. Also less
poststructural. There's a reason I never thrived as a literary
theorist!
______________________
iMind
you, neither I nor my syntax suggests that everyone who uses Reddit
is a troll. Much of value appears there, and in fact some of the
most surprising and pleasurable praise of my own work I've ever
encountered was on a woodworking subreddit.
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