Weird Bookshelf: Buzzard Control – A book about QSL card culture

Here’s a book that we dream about: Buzzard Control – A book about QSL card culture | 2021
Published by TOPSAFE
in collaboration with Antwan Horfee
Texts by Ed Davis, Peter Lyle

272 pages
18,5 x 25,6 cm
First edition of 700
English

The great thing about radio, people who love radio say, is that the pictures are all in your head. Radio history is usually about broadcasters and audiences, but QSL cards chronicle a different culture: the two-way world of Citizen’s Band radio.‘QSL?’ means ‘Do you receive me?’ and ‘QSL’ means ‘I receive you’. The first Q-card was sent from Buffalo, New York, in 1916. For decades the cards became a social medium for amateur radio enthusiasts. CB aficionados could use the blank sides of QSL cards like classified ads, to promote services, CB clubs and societies. The images in this book are from the QSL card collection of Antoine Horfee, assembled as a novice’s celebration of the QSL card. Inside Buzzard Control, the pictures are now all in your hands. (from editor)