Wednesday, February 13, 2008

My First Book

Well, I officially have a book out. Will anyone read it? Hard to say, but it's pretty neat and I can display it in my bookcase and casually point it out to people and offer to pose for a picture with it. You know, the basics.

You can find it on:

amazon.com
(For my international fans)
amazon.co.uk
blackwell.co.uk
abebooks.com

The cover art is below. You may ask why there is a tiny clay figure pushing a cart with a giant telephone. Especially because the majority of the book deals with the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Did they have shopping carts and telephones like that? Well, the answer is no. But the people were shrinking even as their purchasing power was increasing. So while the people were small, evidently they were not smart enough to scale down futuristic phones to a more appropriate size.





Blurb from the back cover:

Historically, scholars of economic growth have focused almost exclusively on aggregate output or income as a way to assess the standard of living in a society. This work supplements and challenges this methodology by using evidence of the biological standard of living to measure the physiological adjustments of human populations to changes in economic conditions. Human stature captures the biological costs and benefits of economic activity and serves as a primary indicator of the biological standard of living. While income and output appear to steadily improve over time, human stature fluctuates through time, implying that the general increase of incomes came at the expense of health, nutrition, and ultimately height.

The book begins by using an innovative estimation technique to generate per capita GDP figures for Colonial America, then finds evidence of convergence and divergence of stature in the nineteenth-century United States, before concluding with the global exploration of the impact of economic and health variables on stature in the nineteenth century. The book is addressed to researchers in Economics, History, Nutrition, and Health.

1 comment:

EJ Belasco said...

Nice cover. Looks like some great beach reading. By the way, congratulations on becoming a Seahawk.