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Pls! Test Your Concierge With My Question About a Book!
So far I haven't bought into the pay-as-you-go concierge deal since you couldn't recommend any :) but now I have a very special question I though would be a good test for a good concierge.
Would you be kind enough to ask my question from your concierge and report back to me on the forum? It would also be a great way to compare different concierge services as well! So here's the question: -- 1st a little background from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bryan_M...ter_and_writer In 1998, Magee published Confessions of a Philosopher, which essentially offers an introduction to philosophy in autobiographical form. This latter book was involved in a libel lawsuit as a result of Magee repeating the rumour that Ralph Schoenman, a controversial associate of Bertrand Russell during the philosopher's final decade, had been planted by the CIA in an effort to discredit Russell. Schoenman successfully sued Magee for libel in the UK, with the result that the first printing of the British edition of the book was pulped.[citation needed] A second defamation suit, filed in California against Random House, was settled in 2001. The allegations were expunged by settlement, and a new edition was issued and provided to more than 700 academic and public libraries.[6] The question: I want to buy the version of this book with the omitted text if possible just for fun; for the heck of it. ;) There are at least three editions on Amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/Confessions-Ph.../dp/0375750363 http://www.amazon.com/Confessions-Ph.../dp/B000M4K4UK http://www.amazon.com/Confessions-Ph.../dp/0753804719 The question is can I buy in 2012 the version of the book with the omitted text? If yes, which version is it? -- So folks would you ask your concierge about it? My gratitude is forever yours! |
The edition here indicates that it is the British version and that it was published in 1997, prior to the defamation suit. For the $10 "risk" I'd say it is probably the one you want.
You already did the research. At that point it is just a matter of reading the details on the Amazon pages. Not sure that you need someone else to do that for you or that I'd trust someone to get such a nuanced detail correct, particularly when it would take longer to explain the task than to just do it. :confused: |
Originally Posted by sbm12
(Post 19704858)
The edition here indicates that it is the British version and that it was published in 1997, prior to the defamation suit. For the $10 "risk" I'd say it is probably the one you want.
You already did the research. At that point it is just a matter of reading the details on the Amazon pages.
Originally Posted by sbm12
(Post 19704858)
Not sure that you need someone else to do that for you or that I'd trust someone to get such a nuanced detail correct, particularly when it would take longer to explain the task than to just do it. :confused:
But thanks anyways for your help! |
This sounds like the most interesting request I've seen in a while. "Ask your concierge to find or order a book for me." I remember trying to find a really obscure book that I read as a child, "(Abraham) Lincoln's Yarns and Stories". I found a copy in Powell's Book's in Portland, OR. Now you can get it on Kindle for free.
I always think of using concierges for local things, tickets for plays, advice on restaurants, local bookstores, buying flowers, etc. I would not think to ask them about buying books online. |
Originally Posted by zitsky
(Post 19705365)
I always think of using concierges for local things, tickets for plays, advice on restaurants, local bookstores, buying flowers, etc. I would not think to ask them about buying books online.
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Originally Posted by Wayfahrer
(Post 19702793)
So folks would you ask your concierge about it?
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Ask your antiquarian bookseller or your librarian to isolate the correct edition.
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Originally Posted by nerd
(Post 19708561)
To answer your rather bizarre question: No, I would not ask a hotel concierge about the best source for a philosophy textbook.
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Originally Posted by ladytraveler
(Post 19711802)
Ask your antiquarian bookseller or your librarian to isolate the correct edition.
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Okay, I'm confused. Are we talking about hotel concierges here? Why exactly would you expect a concierge to be the go-to guy for rare books? I thought concierges were supposed to know about services in their localities of use to guests, not about everything under the sun.
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I think the OP is asking about subscription concierge services or some of the ones offered with certain credit cards.
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Originally Posted by MSPeconomist
(Post 19713320)
I think the OP is asking about subscription concierge services or some of the ones offered with certain credit cards.
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Yes, thanks for clarifying. I did say that I was confused, didn't I?
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Originally Posted by MSPeconomist
(Post 19713320)
I think the OP is asking about subscription concierge services or some of the ones offered with certain credit cards.
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Originally Posted by Braindrain
(Post 19713558)
I'm also confused how this has anything to do with travel...
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