@benjiboy I got to meet him some years ago. He was doing a book tour and signing copies when I was working in the Pentagon. I still have my autographed copy - I suspect his autograph doesn't add much value to it though, as I got the impression that he made a significant portion of his retirement income from book signings.
@TheFlyingCamera
I know it's off the subject, but Nagasaki was was the most unlucky city in history, because the second nuclear bomb was going to be dropped on Kokura but the 100 % cloud cover over the target made it impossible for the bombardier to see the ground with the Norden bombsight, so they had to go to Nagasaki the secondary target.
@benjiboy which, considering the nature of nuclear weapons, is rather ironic - you don't need precision when the blast radius for the bomb is measured in miles. As they say "close only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and thermonuclear weapons"