\title{Book review --- `How to run a paper mill'} \author[Allan Reese]{Allan Reese\\University of Hull} \begin{article} \noindent {\em `How to run a paper mill', \bf John Woodwark}, Information Geometers, Winchester (1992), ISBN 1-874728-00-3, xv + 111 pages.\footnote{This review is reproduced from the TUG'93 {\em TUGly Telegraph}} \bigskip \noindent Not a manual on processing lumber into landfill. The sub-title is explanatory: {\it Writing technical papers and getting them published}. This slim volume will interest all members as it describes scientific progress in the modern context. Papers are currency; they are the tickets to attend \TeX\ conferences; they earn kudos, preferment and promotion. The approach is realistic and entertainingly cynical --- thought-provoking whether you have ``played the system'' and published many papers, or are about to embark on your first. Woodwark considers the reasons and methods for research, writing and publishing --- and all the permutations for ordering those three phrases! He gives pithy practical advice to the aspiring author; this covers the text, and the use of graphics, algebraic notations and modern conventions like pseudo-code. Woodwark himself used \TeX\ for his work, and gives credits on pages xiv, 77 and 99. An unreserved recommendation to read. \end{article} \author[Malcolm Clark]{Malcolm Clark\\University of Warwick} \title{Book review -- `Handbook on Writing for the Mathematical Sciences'} \begin{article} \bigskip \noindent SIAM, the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics recently published the {\it `Handbook on Writing for the Mathematical Sciences'}\/ by {\bf\em Nicholas J Higham}.\footnote{This review is reproduced from the TUG'93 {\em TUGly Telegraph}} The first thing which the reader notices is the delightful use of the very fine Computer Modern typeface. There can be no doubt that for mathematical compuscripts, Computer Modern has no rival. In fact, as the author notes, the book was typeset using \LaTeX\ with the {\it book} document style and the {\it jeep} option. I think it looks pretty good. It contains a lot of good advice for those who want to typeset maths. It firmly acknowledges a debt to a large number of other writers on mathematical writing, and more generally on a wide variety of others who have contributed to editing, writing, language usage and all the other things we tend to take for granted. Having said that, it is clear that Don Knuth is among those acknowledged. Much of the book is directed at those mathematicians who would write for SIAM, and emphasizes their own publications, stressing their particular style (available from your friendly Aston Archive), but much else is applicable widely. In fact, I would tend to see the whole book as `A handbook of writing' which just uses mathematics, and sciences, for illustration. There is so much good sense here that it would be a real pity if non-mathematicians ignored it because they thought it in some way irrelevant. So many of his examples are not only thoughtful, but also clear and apposite. There is also much useful trivia. I was unaware that Euler had `invented' the notation for $e$, although I did have a clue that Kronecker had introduced Kronecker's delta, $\delta_{ij}$! There are lots of other little gems hidden away in the text. But perhaps the main reason for recommending this book is the stress which Higham lays on the use of \TeX\ and its tools. Chapter 10 `Computer aids for writing and research' is the second longest chapter in the book (after `Writing a paper'), and discusses the use of \TeX\ and its variants, as well as spelling checkers, citation services, and the Internet. It is an extremely useful resource just for this chapter. Obviously it cannot be an in-depth treatment, but it says enough to whet the appetite and send the curious in the right direction. Excellent! A warning however: Higham's world is the world of Unix and PostScript. In my view, the correct world to be in if you don't happen to have a Mac. He does point to the use of Ghostscript for printing and previewing { PostScript} files on non-PostScript output devices (available for Unix, MS DOS and Macintosh). With that one small proviso --- recommended. \end{article}