GUIDELINES FOR AUTHORS

GUIDELINES FOR AUTHORS

Inside Fire Engineering you’ll find a blend of regular columnists, one-time feature stories, and compilations of new product and literature information. Our news section and new products and literature sections are staffwritten, but almost all columns and features are written by professionals in the fire service or a related field.

In general, we accept only material submitted exclusively to Fire Engineering. Use examples from your own experience to illustrate your point. If you’re outlining a program, for example, describe how your department handled it.

Include with your article two double-spaced, typewritten copies; your address; your work and home phone numbers; a short biographical sketch of yourself; your Social Security number; and any relevant illustrations. Also send any available photos (slides or prints in color if possible) with the full name of the photographer and captions. Never write on the back of prints.

We do consider unsolicited material, but you might want to contact the editor first to check whether the article is of interest. Send a written query to Fire Engineering, Park 80 West, Plaza 2, 7th Floor, Saddle Brook, NJ 07662, or call (201) 485-0800. We will try to notify you within a month if we can use the material.

We also welcome the following:

  • Comments, whether complimentary or critical, in the form of letters to the editor.
  • Questions for our authors. We ask that you send these through us so we may gauge the interest a particular article generates.
  • Submissions for Coming Events at least three months in advance of the issue you would like them to run in.
  • Information about significant accomplishments of prominent fire service members for Names in the News.
  • Submissions for Apparatus Deliveries. Include a color photograph (print or slide), a list of the apparatus’s important features, the name of the photographer, and your name, address, and phone number. Explain why you chose that particular apparatus—how it suits your community’s district, needs, and growth; your particular department’s functions; and so on.

David Rhodes, Jerry Tracy, and Jack J. Murphy

In The Books: High-Rise Buildings: Understanding the Vertical Challenges

David Rhodes discusses the comprehensive book High-Rise Buildings: Understanding the Vertical Challenges with authors Gerald Tracy and Jack Murphy.
Mason City (IA) Recycling Fire

Building Severely Damaged in Mason City (IA) Recyling Fire Friday Night

A large building at Mason City Recycling Center was heavily damaged in a fire Friday night.