Old Bookaroo
Silver Member
- Dec 4, 2008
- 4,475
- 3,802
chirper97:
Just stumbled across your January 9th post. While it probably won't do any good, I'll try to correct a few things:
Charles Dean Miller used Karl von Mueller as one of this pen names. When he wrote with his wife Gladyce M. Miller they used the pen name "Deek Gladson."
You wrote: "...my impression was that Karl had a great imagination and writing ability, but that his 'facts' often were less than accurate. For example, the bloviation and misdirections by Karl regarding the Lue Treasure. I recall an online communication by Paul Tainter, who took over NPG/Exanimo/Research Unlimited that Karl was a 'good story teller' and care should be taken with stories and implications...."
Now you offer no facts to back that up. What do you know about the LUE that did not, directly or indirectly, come from KvonM's writings? And if you are going to believe someone, wouldn't it make sense to listen to the person who started the business and built it into a national firm - rather than the person who purchased it from the founder? I know Paul Tainter, have done business with him, and he always treated me right. But he was not a treasure hunter like KvonM - no knock there because there just hasn't been another KvonM. Period.
You never met him. I did. There wouldn't be a TreasureNet Forum without Karl von Mueller. There wouldn't be the 2009 hobby of treasure hunting without him. And that's a fact.
You wrote "I also recall that Charles Garrett was providing a lot of assistance with the publications by von Mueller, and that the Garrett line of detectors was always highly touted in NPG and other publications (to the exclusion of White's)." So? RAM Publishing did publish several books by KvonM. Compare the earlier editions of Sudden Wealth (Exanimo Press & The Gold Bug) - page 75, for example - with the RAM editions. The RAM editions include other books published by RAM. It's there in print for all to read.
Charles Garrett hired KvonM to write The Master Hunter Manual - not just the best metal detector instruction book ever written, but an excellent introduction to treasure finding. Try to purchase a copy today - the market price tells you it's value (unlike the numerous copies of The Treasure Hunter readily available for a buck or less).
As for your use of "Exanimo," i find it in remarkably poor taste.
Good luck to all,
~Fred Hollister
Publisher: The Encyclopedia of Buried Treasure Hunting, by Karl von Mueller (San Francisco: 1990) [unlike some "reprinters" - with the permission of the copyright holder!]
Just stumbled across your January 9th post. While it probably won't do any good, I'll try to correct a few things:
Charles Dean Miller used Karl von Mueller as one of this pen names. When he wrote with his wife Gladyce M. Miller they used the pen name "Deek Gladson."
You wrote: "...my impression was that Karl had a great imagination and writing ability, but that his 'facts' often were less than accurate. For example, the bloviation and misdirections by Karl regarding the Lue Treasure. I recall an online communication by Paul Tainter, who took over NPG/Exanimo/Research Unlimited that Karl was a 'good story teller' and care should be taken with stories and implications...."
Now you offer no facts to back that up. What do you know about the LUE that did not, directly or indirectly, come from KvonM's writings? And if you are going to believe someone, wouldn't it make sense to listen to the person who started the business and built it into a national firm - rather than the person who purchased it from the founder? I know Paul Tainter, have done business with him, and he always treated me right. But he was not a treasure hunter like KvonM - no knock there because there just hasn't been another KvonM. Period.
You never met him. I did. There wouldn't be a TreasureNet Forum without Karl von Mueller. There wouldn't be the 2009 hobby of treasure hunting without him. And that's a fact.
You wrote "I also recall that Charles Garrett was providing a lot of assistance with the publications by von Mueller, and that the Garrett line of detectors was always highly touted in NPG and other publications (to the exclusion of White's)." So? RAM Publishing did publish several books by KvonM. Compare the earlier editions of Sudden Wealth (Exanimo Press & The Gold Bug) - page 75, for example - with the RAM editions. The RAM editions include other books published by RAM. It's there in print for all to read.
Charles Garrett hired KvonM to write The Master Hunter Manual - not just the best metal detector instruction book ever written, but an excellent introduction to treasure finding. Try to purchase a copy today - the market price tells you it's value (unlike the numerous copies of The Treasure Hunter readily available for a buck or less).
As for your use of "Exanimo," i find it in remarkably poor taste.
Good luck to all,
~Fred Hollister
Publisher: The Encyclopedia of Buried Treasure Hunting, by Karl von Mueller (San Francisco: 1990) [unlike some "reprinters" - with the permission of the copyright holder!]