Dear Bill,
Congratulations on an excellent book. Despite the minor defects noted in the forum posts - a few blurred photographs and some defective captions - the product is still one of the most comprehensive and impressive compilations of the art of the scale military figurine available today.
I have been following your career with great interest since the mid 1980s when your work first appeared in Military Modelling Magazine, and I have kept the 'how to' articles you wrote, particularly for 'Last Stand at Gandamak' and 'The Ghosts of Chillianwallah', as a supplement to the Windrow and Green Masterclass book. These have been a great aid in developing my own modelling and painting skills. Alas, many years of study have prevented me from maintaining the quantity of work necessary to truly maintain and retain that sort of skill level! Perhaps one day, when the study is complete and the children are more self-sustaining, I will have the time available to catch up with the backlog of projects sitting around awaiting my attention.
Perhaps the thing I have admired most about your work - other than the quality - has been your selection of the British Army on campaign in the 18th and 19th centuries, as this isa field that has received but little attention, asthe majority of figure converters seemed for many years to focus on WWII in general, and the Wehrmacht in particular. It came as a refreshing change to see a more diverse range of subject, particularly as a member of the military forces of the British Commonwealth. Also, I have particularly admired your ability to capture the look and feel of soldiers in action, something which has come through very clearly in the compilation in the new book. As someone who has been in the military for over 20 years, and who has recently seen active service, I can see in your work the reflected faces of my comrades - dirty, weary, stressed, jaded, heartsick - as well as determined, courageous and mischievous!
I look forward to seeing more of your work in the future, and hope that you will grace us with more descriptive articles that assist novices and experts alike to broaden our skills in the art.
Again, my congratulations
Glenn Kerr