You'd certainly know better than I. But here's the site I was looking at:[pedantry]Depending on when and how she actually wrote it, it could have been a file - in WordStar, Apple Writer, AtariWriter, or maybe Paperclip. Don't know if the publishers would have taken it that way, though.[/pedantry]
Good grief I'm an old nerd.
Edit: Looking at a history of prepress that I found, it looks the first typesetting computer was introduced in 1963. So it very likely *would* have been a file, at least at the publishers - probably on 5 1/4 or 3 1/2 inch floppy. No idea whether van Hise give them a disk or a typed submission to kick things off, though. But the publishers apparently even had decent OCR at that point, if the latter!
When I first started working in publishing, around 1987 or so, most everything was still done on paper. Authors delivered hard-copy manuscripts, which were edited with red pencils and Post-It notes, before finally being transmitted from Editorial to Production to be typeset. And nobody in Editorial had a computer in their office or cubicle with which to read "files." We were all still using electric typewriters back then.
Not sure how the actual typesetting was done. That was another department . . . ..
http://www.prepressure.com/prepress/history/events-1950-1959
Like I said, I have no idea how the actual typesetting was done, but the authors weren't delivering files on disks and Editorial wasn't transmitting disks to Production. When I passed a book onto Production, I gave them a physical manuscript with editorial marks scribbled onto it in pencil, while keeping a photocopy for myself.
Gotta say, I don't miss all that xeroxing . . ..
