Oh man, only one word longer than the shortest short story in the world: The Dinosaur! ?Place tobacco in pipe, light tobacco, smoke it. The End.
Ah yes, that was what I remembered. Perhaps that tarnished his reputation in the industry enough that he moved on. A lack of confidence was not his problem. He seems to have traveled to every pipe event while he was active, there are a lot of signed books out there and photos indicate he was very active.John Loring published a page on Hacker’s misinformation regarding Dunhill.
The field of scholarship has moved well beyond Hacker, but he did pioneering work.
Well, Carl Ehwa has been gone since the mid 1970s but, I thank Dr. Fred Hanna every time I look at my remaining tins of Legends.This thread is the first mention I've heard of him in a while, much like Fred Hanna or Carl Ehwa.
Much like Dunhill since they walked away from tobacco.
my university says they're smoke free. But most buildings have ashtrays outside and people smoke all the time. Also my job is union and part of our contract states we're allowed to smoke outside. No one has said anything negative to me about my pipe smoking. I've gotten a few compliments on the smell or told the pipe is pimp (that one was yelled from a moving car.)I have his The Ultimate Cigar Book. It's not so much about techniques as it is a survey on cigars, with a "directory" of brands and a description of their offerings which I've found rather useful. I made it a point to pull it out in front of a full class of students at the university and read it whilst I invigilated their final lab exam: my personal way of giving the finger to the university's head honchos on the very semester they declared the varsity "smoke free".
I wanted to get Hacker's book on pipes, but never got the chance.
Or, the internet proved him not to be an expert.Our perception of facts naturally changes with time. The book was an important work to many, though it involved a good degree of opinion and conjecture upon matters that can't necessarily be regarded as timeless truths (nor, occasionally, factual for that matter). But it is a corpus of work whose publication involved researched and considerable effort. It has been edited and revised with contributions from his contemporaries in the pipe world. And it has already outlived, and will yet outlive many of us. Whether or not you agree with its content, in whole or in part, the fact stands that the book will continue to educate and to survive until long after threads like this one, and its countless predecessors, have long been lost to memory (if not to a search engine).
Put another way, if the "book of the future" is having to read recycled complaints about "Lakeland sauce" every week, then I pick the hardcover with a side of pipe show. I applaud anyone with the intellectual stamina to create a book on any subject, let alone pipes, at a time before Google made everyone an instant expert.
I suspect he signed most of his books. All of mine were signed when I bought them, many years before I ever attended a pipe show.Ah yes, that was what I remembered. Perhaps that tarnished his reputation in the industry enough that he moved on. A lack of confidence was not his problem. He seems to have traveled to every pipe event while he was active, there are a lot of signed books out there and photos indicate he was very active.
This is probably true and that is ineffably sad.Whether or not you agree with its content, in whole or in part, the fact stands that the book will continue to educate and to survive until long after threads like this one, and its countless predecessors, have long been lost to memory (if not to a search engine).