Home Page

Publishing Schedule

Buying our books

Our eBooks

Which self-pub book?

Books about publishing

INDY SELF-PUBLISHING

SELF-PUBLISHING COMPANY

BRAINY BEGINNER'S GUIDE

199 SELF-PUBLISHING TIPS

WORST MISTEAKS

STINKERS! Worst self-pub

SELF-PUB BUSINESS BASICS

SELF-PUB BOOK DESIGN

EZ E-BOOKS

OUTSKIRTS PRESS

REAL SELF-PUBLISHER

Books about crime

INTERNET HARASSMENT book

Books about telecom

PHONE book

PHONE SYSTEM book

TELECOM REFERENCE EBOOK

Funny books

STORIES book

FLUNK book

Possible future books

Blue-Collar Basketball

D-I-Y phone installation

D-I-Y home audio/video

D-I-Y lawyering

temp

art storage

Forty-Six Films

Info for reviewers

News Releases

INDY self-publishing book

Self-Pub COMPANY release

Self-Pub Book release

Stories Book release

Outskirts Book Release

Flunk Book release

Phone Book Release

About Us

Contact Us

Author info

Websites & Blogs

Silver Sands Books

 

 ABOUT US

"Silver Sands Books" is a registered tradename in Connecticut, and a pending Federal trademark.

We specialize in books that make technical subjects easy for non-technical people to understand. We also have other books, blogs and websites. Two of our specialty areas are telecommunications and publishing.

T
he company was started in 2008, by someone with about 40 years' experience in writing and publishing. We published one book in 2008, three books in 2009, six in 2010, and will probably do ten or more in 2011. 
 
SILVER SANDS is a beautiful beach and state park on Long Island Sound in Milford, Connecticut — our home town. Charles Island is about a half mile from the beach, and people get to it at low tide by walking across a sandbar that's covered at high tide. Famous pirate Captain Kidd was in Milford in 1699 before being arrested for piracy and murder. He may have buried treasure on the island. If anyone found it, they kept it a secret.

GREEN PUBLISHING For technical books which require frequent updating because of changing conditions, Silver Sands Books uses a new book publishing method called "Print-On-Demand" which greatly reduces the time, cost and waste of traditional publishing. Specialized POD printing services can produce and distribute books to online and "bricks-and-mortar" booksellers when they are ordered — even one at a time. There is no waste. There are no obsolete books. There are no "remainders" to be sold for a buck a book. There are no unsalable books to be shredded and mulched. There are no wasted trees.

POD books are manufactured "just-in-time" like the efficient Kanban system that Toyota developed for making cars with minimal parts on hand. People get fresh books at a reasonable price and they books look as good as books made the old fashioned way.

Print-On-Demand should not be confused with "vanity" or "subsidy" publishers that exist mainly to take money from writers with books that have no chance of being a commercial success. Many major publishers use Print-On-Demand. Vanity presses also use POD. There's no storage expense, and books don't become obsolete before they can be shipped.
 

eBOOKS (electronic books) exist only as digital files. They are made to be read on PC screens, cellphones and specialized eBook readers provided by a growing list of companies including Amazon, Sony and Barnes & Noble. eBooks don't require paper, ink or glue to manufaacture, and can be transpoirted without trucks and stored without bookshelves.


CURSED ISLAND?
Charles Island was allegedly cursed three times. The first curse was brought in the 17th century by an Indian chief, whose tribe fought for the island which they felt was sacred ground. After settlers defeated the Indians, the chief said, "Any shelter will crumble to the Earth." No building on the island has lasted more than a few years. The second curse was supposedly brought by Captain Kidd in 1699 when he buried his treasure there. Captain Kidd cursed with death anyone who attempted to dig it up. The third curse was supposedly brought in 1721 by five sailors who stole Mexican emperor Guatmozin's treasure. Guatmozin put a curse on the stolen treasure. After four of the five sailors suffered tragic deaths, the last sailor hid the treasure in the basement of a Milford tavern. When it was discovered by a drunk searching for beer, the fifth sailor transported it to Charles Island, moving the third curse with it.

Legend says treasure hunters discovered an iron chest in 1850. As they attempted to open it, a "screeching, flaming skeleton descended from the sky. It lurched into the pit where the chest was, sending forth a shower of blue flames." The treasure hunters dropped their tools and fled from Charles Island. They returned the next day and their tools were gone and the digging site had been smoothed over, as if they'd never been there.


The photo at the top of the page was not taken at Charles Island or at Silver Sands Beach, but it's a nice picture.