
No matter where you are in America – the United States of America – you’re within shouting distance of an amateur. Maybe it’s a garage tinkerer, a homebrew geneticist, DIY archaeologist, or “self-taught sky-buffs” fabricating home telescopes that rival the technical ability of major institutions. These characters and their creations are explored in This American Life contributing editor Jack Hitt’s newly published book, Bunch of Amateurs, which hits stands today.
America’s self-invented tinkerers are back at it in their metaphorical garages—fiddling with everything from solar-powered cars to space elevators. In Bunch of Amateurs, Jack Hitt visits a number of different garages and has written a fascinating book that looks at America’s current batch of amateurs and their pursuits. From a tattooed young woman in the Bay Area trying to splice a fish’s glow-in-the-dark gene into common yogurt (all done in her kitchen using salad spinners) to a space fanatic on the brink of developing the next generation of telescopes from his mobile home, Hitt not only tells the stories of people in the grip of a passion but argues that America’s history is bound up in a cycle of amateur surges.
In celebration of the amateur spirit, we’re giving away a bunch of prizes (including an Orion 90mm refractor telescope) starting today and in the coming weeks – more information after the jump.
For our first prize we’re giving away an Orion AstroView 90mm refractor telescope. Also included is an adjustable tripod and multiple eyepieces for various star-gazing applications. Celestial objects in the night sky will appear bright as day with this awesome entry-level telescope. You can find more information on this device on the manufacturer’s website.
To enter to win: all you have to do is leave a comment below! Comments left before May 17th @ 11:59PM PST will be considered to win this prize. Be sure to leave a valid email so we can contact you if you win. Feel free to tell a story about your own amateur pursuits, although this is not necessary – just leave a comment! For complete rules please click here.

We’ll be offering two more prizes, on Tuesday May 29th & Tuesday June 12th, accompanied by interviews with the author Jack Hitt – be sure to check back then for another chance to win!
These prizes are provided by The Crown Publishing Group, publishers of Bunch of Amateurs.


I want that telescope!
i want a telescope!
*Insert witty comment about wanting a telescope.*
ASTRONOMY YEAAAHHHH
I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night. i love that telescope!
Amen!
Looking forward to reading the book! Oh man… I want to do astrophotography so bad.. I would put that telescope to use!
Telescope please!
Everyone wants a telescope. If anyone is interested, it looks like this book is way cheaper on amazon, new in hardcover.
This would be an awesome introduction for my son!!
Those guys want that telescope!
(And, so do I.)
It would be nice to have a telescope of my own.
Count me in!
Telescopes ROCK, plus I’m an amateur at almost everything, gotta try it all once.
…I’d quite like one.
A reply has been left. Will it be found and replaced with a telescope? Only time shall tell.
I want to live in USA for a while!
very nice
Telescope would be fun!
Definately an amateur here, and proud of it!
Hey me too.
Awesome telescope!!
I’d use the telescope every night! Thanks for the opportunity.
Alas! I’m a professional.
A professional who WANTS A TELESCOPE.
This looks like a great book, and one that tells a better story of how many Americans use their leisure time more productively than consumer culture would lead us to believe.
day dreaming about star gazing through such refracting amazing scope!
I would love the telescope.
Go Makers!!! I have an 11 yearold son who is a huge fan who would take that telescope apart and build a sensor array out of it allowing for power to be re-routed to the main deflector shield and saving all life in the universe!!!
Who wouldn’t want one?
My kids would love the telescope!
Having a telescope would be a wonderful thing.
The spirit of the inventor is truly immutable. Now, onward ye dilettantes an make professional your amateur methods!
MAKE my star gazing dreams come true
In college, I was actually on a track to be an astronomer for a while, but decided it was too difficult. I feel so sad having given that up, and I feel sad for everyone who thinks they can’t make a difference because they’re not a professional scientist. Before all these fancy degrees, anyone could be a scientist. Power to the amateurs!
I want to see stars!
My nephew and I love stargazing!! And this telescope would be a wonderful surprise for him.
Telescope, yes. The kids would love it.
Wheeeeeeeeee!!!! Telescope…and good article!
i do wanna the telescope
I’ve had a New Year’s goal to get more familiar with the night sky…
Count me in! What a beauty that one is – love love love looking at the stars!
Amateur telescope-winner, reporting in.
I would love to win that telescope for my son, he is only 5 but he loves the planets and stars.
I hope it comes with a camera adapter. If not, I’ll just have to make one on my 3D printer.
My kids would so love the chance to be Astronomy geeks!
One of my favorite quotes I heard listening to Pale Blue Dot by Sagan on the audio book as I drove across the desert – “TELESCOPES ARE TIME MACHINES”. Awesome! I got home a week later & bought my daughter a telescope!
Pete Grady/peterjgrady.com – Art Gever on FB
The telescope would be an awesome addition to our Makerspace. We are the amateurs who occasionally hang out with the pro’s up at the UH Institute for Astronomy here on Maui. jerry at mauimakers.com
Would be good to teach my son how to use a telescope
Thanks
90 mm aperture? That sounds pretty great.
I got gifted a half working Bausch & Lomb telescope. Since it wouldn’t work with the eye pieces I grabbed some PVC pipe that would fit inside and grafted the body cap of my DSLR onto it (with a hole cut in the center). I now have essentially a 900mm lens and have managed to get a picture of Jupiter with all 4 Galilean moons, I was so excited! It would be awesome to have a real working telescope too!
Nice work man!
“How far away the stars seem, and how far is our first kiss, and ah, how old my heart.”
Send one my way
Count me in!
Really looking forward to reading this book!
Would love to set up a sun funnel with this scope
There are so many talented people out there! I had visions of doing crazy things that were hardly practical, but that doesn’t stop some people.
*salute*
+1
As a painter, I delight in all the amazing, creative, crazy fun creations at the Maker Faire. Alas I can only dabble with line, shape, space, texture, form and value in a two dimensional manner. I can’t wait to see the show in San Mateo this weekend!
I don’t think I reach even amateur-level skills in so many areas that fascinate me, including astronomy, but I’m working on it — one garden, one knitted shawl, one Coursera course at a time.
I love sky watching, and would make great use of this telescope!
Looks like a great book. Can’t wait to read!
i would like to share that telescope with my 8th graders at a starparty.
Carver would be quite happy with this renaissance.
I’m going to go check this book out right now on Amazon! BTW can’t wait for this weekends maker faire!
I’d use this to watch the sky with my kids!
This would be a much cooler way to look at the stars with my 5yr old daughter than on the computer!
Looks like a great book. Can’t wait to read it!
I’ve been enjoying my old telescope that I got as a kid recently (an old TASCO with a “Watch Haley’s Comet!” sticker on the box)… there is a lot to look at one the moon!
Cheers.
I’ve always wanted to see the stars and constellations a little closer. I’m always looking at the stars.
size matter
Venus said, “What a big telescope you have”
I’ll say, “All the better to see you with!”
Omg can’t wait to see the stars in my telescope…..oh the book sounds cool too
I look forward to turning this telescope into a home brew Portal 2 weapon replicate. And yea, you guessed it, it will have lasers. PEW PEW PEW!
I love this new ” renaissance” outlook on life now a days. I think its so important to not be content with what they show to us, and try to figure life out ourselves. Maker faire gives this ideology the great push and support it needs.
Here is my response. In college, I had a strong interest in astronomy, but when I went through the Engineering building to find the astronomy department (housed for some reason next to engineering) there was a prominent sign outside of the departmental office indicating that there was virtually no work in astronomy, and there was no point in trying to sign up for astronomy classes as nobody studying in the department was likely to ever make a living at it. Good grief!
Would love a high powered scope. Our whole family loves looking at the night sky and enjoying its lovely sights!
I hope to win the telescope.
I was here!
Goodness, both me and my 7 year old would have a blast with a pretty, new telescope:)
I would love to win this telescope! Always wanted a telescope again since my parents took back the one I received for Christmas when I was a kid because it was broken.