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Posted 11/22/2007 in All Weblog Posts | Workbenches

When the first copy of “Workbenches: From Design & Theory to Construction and Use” arrived on my desk from China via airmail, I couldn’t stand to even look at it. I stuck it in my satchel (which my wife fondly calls the “manpurse”) and took it home.

Before dinner that evening, I took the book out and showed it to the kids. Maddy, 11, took the book and started paging through it.

“Wow. This is great dad,” she said. “Will you autograph it?”

My heart swelled a bit. I had impressed my daughter that I was an author. But something didn’t quite seem right in her tone of voice.

“Why do you want me to sign it?” I asked.

“So I can sell it on eBay,” she said. “Someone might pay me extra if you sign it.”

Ah, Maddy, my little bourgeois capitalist. Since then a few other people have weighed in on the new book. A few people have said the book is a bit of a rehash of principles I’ve discussed on my blog and in print. That’s fair to a degree. My blog has been a place where I explore ideas in rough-draft form. The book is the summation of more than a decade of ideas and experiences, polished and complete. Well, that was the plan.

This week I got my first review on Amazon, which sells the book at a very competitive price, I might add. I don’t know the reviewer personally, but he read the entire book and grasped the message I was trying to transmit. Below is that review in its entirety, reprinted with the permission of the author.

The book is now available most everywhere. If you would like to purchase an autographed copy (along with a companion CD of additional material), you can visit my personal web site. I can't compete on price with the big booksellers, but I can sign the book (and occasionally one of the kids helps by adding a small smiley face on the title page).

Those books with the smiley face have got to be worth something on eBay some day.

— Christopher Schwarz

5.0 out of 5 stars 
A truly remarkable woodworking book
November 17, 2007
By Landscape W. Shipwreck (Island J, Brigstocke Township, N. Ontario)

As an avid reader of Christopher Schwarz's various articles and columns in woodworking magazines, I've been awaiting the publication of this book with anticipation. Now that I've read it I have to say that it's better than I expected, and my expectations were very high.

I've read a number of books and articles on workbenches (notably the ones by Lon Schleining and Scott Landis, which are valuable for what they are: surveys of various styles of workbenches, with info on how to build a few of them). This book is different. Not just a little different. Radically different.

Schwarz is not just a good writer. He is an extremely good writer, vastly better than the majority of writers about woodworking; better than most writers, period. He is not merely capable of explaining things clearly, or of organizing his text coherently. His writing is actually enjoyable to read. He has the ability to combine highly technical information with a kind of narrative structure, within which personal experience, historical research and theoretical conceptualization come together almost seamlessly. One could describe the book as almost an essay in the classical, Montaignesque sense: a personal, spiraling account of a particular subject, whose compelling structure takes the reader along on a wide-ranging voyage of discovery, and makes the reader a companion of the author as he works out his own thinking. However, this should not be understood as saying that the book is in any way vague, for it isn't. I mean to underline its powerfully engaging quality. I believe somebody who wasn't a woodworker, who had no plans whatsoever to construct a workbench, would enjoy reading it.

Schwarz is also a gifted scholar and theoretician, a trait not typical of woodworkers, of writers about woodworking. The evidence of his thorough research and profound thought on his subject abounds in the book. His conceptualization of the workbench as a tool for holding lumber so that its 3 different surfaces (edges, faces, and ends) can be worked is a recognition that you won't find anywhere else, and one that animates the entire book. It may sound simple, even obvious, but so does the second law of thermodynamics.

The book provides designs and construction overviews of 2 very different benches, which may seem a paltry number of options. It is not. Schwarz has distilled years of research and bench-building into these 2 designs, and offers plenty of options along the way as to how one might alter them to suit one's own purposes. The illustrations are abundant, clear and useful. Numerous sidebars provide detailed and helpful insight into a variety of sub- or side-topics (eg. Find a source for yellow pine; Pattern-maker's vises: friend or foe?; The Stanley No. 203 - better than a peg). The index is extensive.

Anybody familiar with Schwarz from his hand-tool courses and DVDs knows that he is a formidable woodworker and teacher. Those qualities resound through this book, as does his engaging ability to be personal, as does his earnestness, as does his good humor. I've always learned easily from him, and this book continues that trend.

The first bench I ever built was from an article of Schwarz's called "The $175 Workbench," published in Popular Woodworking in 2000. I still have it, and use it every day. I will be building another one soon, using an adaptation of one of the designs outlined in this book; this book which will accompany me along the way, like a friend. Perhaps this sounds a bit loopy, but read the book and tell me you don't share the feeling.

11/22/2007 1:35:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Chris,

Congratulations!. You more than earned it. Now if my book would just get here. I think there is a conspiracy between the folks here that deliver the things I order. I think they hold it just long enough to see my head almost explode from the anticipation. LOL Have a great Thanksgiving.

Darrin
11/22/2007 6:29:01 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I echo Darrin comments, on both counts.
Congratulation, and please oh please, tell me my copy will arrive soon.

Bob, whose copy was ordered on 31 oct, still waiting, sigh!
11/22/2007 9:03:52 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
An excellent and much deserved review I am sure. My copy too has not yet arrived. I did shuffle over to the books section at Lee Valley the other day and felt as though I was peeking under the Christmas tree when I looked through the copy on the shelf. Even though I felt like I was spoiling the surprise, I made myself a promise not to read any of it until my copy arrives. Here's hoping its got a smiley face on it.

cheers, Jay
11/22/2007 11:43:54 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Gee, I too am anxiously awaiting a signed copy of "Workbenches", and like Jay have resisted the urge to thumb through a copy at any of the local Lee Valleys here in Toronto until it arrives. Unlike like your daughter, though, I never would have thought of the ebay thing. I would much rather keep it for instruction, inspiration and good old rainy day re-reading.
I an positive it may help co-ordinate how my current bench may morph before getting on to a new one.
Cheers
11/23/2007 6:51:24 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Ditto to all except that I got mine last week and have already digested most of it. BURP! Great reading and great info rarely exist in the same tome but maestro Schwarz has done himself proud and the rest of us a big favor. What better way to become engaged in a thing than to be amused and informed at the same time. Cudo's, mon ami.

My only nit with the effort is that it did not contain plans for the Holtzapffel bench. I know, I know, I've got it otherwise but it would have been double sweet to have had it in there too. Maybe in the 2nd edition, eh? And whilst you're at it, maybe a companion DVD too? Just a suggestion.

always,
J.C.

BTW, as a result of Chris' work, my bench is about to be retrofitted with a twin [wood] screw face vise.
11/23/2007 7:22:35 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
J.C.,

The original plan was indeed to incorporate the Holtzapffel bench into the book -- and include plans for the earlier benches I'd built and show their evolution. That will have to wait for a revised edition.

However, there is a DVD in the works. We shot it in July at Lie-Nielsen Toolworks. No word yet on a release date. They're still working on the second part of the Clark & Williams masterwork.

Chris
11/23/2007 11:02:35 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Chris, I received the book a few days ago and am glad to have a long holiday weekend to spend with it. I've already skimmed through a few times. I must confess that I had very high expectations. I'm happy to report that the book far exceeds my expectations on every level. Many thanks for keeping the art alive.

I was also very pleased to see that my copy is signed. You never know when the eBay money will come in handy ; )

Michael
11/23/2007 2:15:54 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Chris:

You have written a great book. It is really well done and has given me lots of good idea; my quote on woodnet. The reviewer on Amazon is right; your "conceptualization of the workbench as a tool for holding lumber so that its 3 different surfaces (edges, faces, and ends) can be worked" was a subtle but powerful revelation to me too. For my needs I am planning on making a version combining elements of the Holtzapffel & Roubo. Thanks again for writing what would surely become a "classic" in the years to come.

LB

11/23/2007 4:53:59 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
All I can say is, I'm very, very glad that I did not start to build my workbench before your book came out. Thank you for writing it!
11/23/2007 6:29:14 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I bought the set from Chris at the LN show in Philly, at teh time the book wasnt available but I did come home with the CD. The Book came a couple of weeks ago and aside of thumbing through it and reading the great grey "side stories" and picture captions.

I was looking forward to this holiday weekend at my inlaws, since I would have alot of time to read. While people who are diligent in reading the blog and the magazine articles will find similar information, there is much more in there.

I will also second that Chris is a great researcher, think about he found 14 different ways to sharpen card scrapers for the last 100 years. He is thourough for sure!
11/23/2007 7:40:10 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I received the book a while back (Amazon.com - should have read the blog a bit further, I would have sprung for the autographed version) and was immediately taken with the photography.

I've been working on the works ever since, about half way through, and it is a great read. I've bought several books on workbenches as I've been looking at building my own for a couple years now. This will require a complete rework of the "shed" aka "shop" aka "the mess".

This book should save me considerable money in dead ends.

Thank you!
11/24/2007 10:14:57 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Chris,
I too received the CD early and the book later from Joel at TFWW, but I will get a second copy with your sinature and keep it on the shelf out of harms way.
Now to the book;after re-reading the first few chapters yesterday I closed the book and went to my "bench" and sat in front of it thinking about all the ways it makes simple things more difficult for me to perform. Clearly this is the opposite of what a bench is supposed to do. A simple task like laying out the pins from the tail board has given me fits all because the board is 47" long. I'll get through this current problem but I can assure you now that I have your book to help guide me, I don't forsee having to deal with a situation like this again.Thank you for this book!
Michael
11/24/2007 1:07:20 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Congrats! this is sure to be a classic. And I can say I corresponded with the guy.
11/25/2007 9:20:22 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Chris,

I was crestfallen when my book arrived and there was no personalized slam to go along with your signature. I was expecting something like, "Skiver, the only thing worse than your satire is your pathetic attempt to saw to a line. Love, hugs, and kisses...Chris Schwarz."

However, I figured that as one of the first "regular" 50 or so people in the country to get a copy, I should just be happy to have one that you generically signed while waiting at stop lights, multitasking as you tried to keep the idle on the Karmann Ghia high enough to maintain combustion. So, I didn't get too bothered.

Now, I find that not only did I get the generic “Chris Schwarz 2007” autograph, but I got the Schwarz Trifecta blow off since neither Maddy nor Katy gave me a smiley face. I still mean all of that praise for the book I lavished upon you in my email, because the book is really, really good. However, I just don't understand how you can pass along to your daughters your belief in a woodworking Caste System where some people get smileys and some of us get NOTHING.

I've been working on my sawing. I think I deserved a smiley face.
11/26/2007 7:40:16 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Jeff,

Getting a smiley face on your book is easy. Just head down to my daughters' school and hang out all day until one of them emerges. Perhaps to get their attention, you could tap on the glass to the classrooms, jump up and down and yell, "Hey little girls, come out and sign my book."

Barring that, perhaps you could drive really slowly next to them as they walk home from school and offer them some candy in exchange for them penning a smiley face on the title page.

Those are just a couple ways I thought of this morning.

Chris
11/26/2007 8:55:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Jeff,

After you've followed Chris' advice above, I'll come and visit you in the "Big House"...and bring you some cookies.
11/26/2007 4:30:37 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I have been enjoying your book since last week. I've been savoring it like a fine wine. It's a classic I'm sure, and a gift that will keep on giving for a long time to come. I already know where the Roubo is going to go. The curved top Sjobergs will be moving to the carport where it will start it's new life as a planting table which is much more in keeping with it's stature and construction. Nice job Chris!
11/26/2007 6:00:05 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
This is Chris's wife. While I hate to make a scene on this blog of his, I would like to make a public statement to discourage anyone from tracking down our daughters at their school or following them in a car and offering them candy. That **** is not funny. And I will rip anyone's heart out who tries it.

Warm regards,

Lucy
12/2/2007 5:42:21 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Fortunately for me, I DID get one of the much-desired additional "smiley" signatures.

Actually, it looks a lot like a Renee Mackintosh rose! (Even more so if you hold the book at arm's length and squint your eyes a little...)

The book is great, Chris. I look forward to putting it to good use with the construction of my next workbench.

Regards,

Ethan
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