Guest guest Posted February 18, 2007 Report Share Posted February 18, 2007 Has any one yet purchased: " Channels of Acupuncture & Secondary Channels " From Giovanni Maciocia? I purchased a copy in December and started going through it to find that there are entire sections that are misprinted and so missing some 30 or more pages. (Problems start showing up around page 100) The nature of the missing pages is such that I believe every copy would have such problems. I have sadly been getting the run around (passed from one e-mail address to the next) and have not had any return phone calls from the publisher (Elesvier). This is of course very disturbing especially since there is no errata on the web site, etc. I'd like to know if anyone else has the book to confirm this is a universal problem. Thanks, David Botton Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2007 Report Share Posted February 19, 2007 David, > I purchased a copy in December and started going through it to find that there are entire > sections that are misprinted and so missing some 30 or more pages. (Problems start showing > up around page 100) > The nature of the missing pages is such that I believe every copy would have such problems. This is most likely a bindery problem. These books are printed in Asia where the costs are cheap but every bindery makes mistakes and the faster and cheaper the bindery, the more mistakes. > I > have sadly been getting the run around (passed from one e-mail address to the next) and > have not had any return phone calls from the publisher (Elesvier). This is of course very > disturbing especially since there is no errata on the web site, etc. > I'd like to know if anyone else has the book to confirm this is a universal problem. I have spot-checked the supply at Redwing Books and did not find any copies with missing pages. That dosen't mean there are not a lot of copies with missing pages in circulation, just that I didn't find any in the current Redwing stock. You need to return the book to the company from which you ordered the book. Call first. Elsevier is a huge multi-billion dollar conglomerate and I don't doubt you've played email tag but the persons responsible for replacing your book are the persons from whom you purchased it. If you bought it from Redwing, call Redwing; if you bought it from Amazon, call Amazon; if you bought it from your school bookstore, they will arrange for a new copy with their supplier. It always helps to have a copy of your invoice or receipt but most booksellers will have a record they can access. Bob Felt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2007 Report Share Posted February 19, 2007 I have the book and my copy is fine. --- rfaultson <bob wrote: > David, > > > I purchased a copy in December and started going > through it to find > that there are entire > > sections that are misprinted and so missing some > 30 or more pages. > (Problems start showing > > up around page 100) > > The nature of the missing pages is such that I > believe every copy > would have such problems. > > This is most likely a bindery problem. These books > are printed in > Asia where the costs are cheap but every bindery > makes mistakes and > the faster and cheaper the bindery, the more > mistakes. > > > I > > have sadly been getting the run around (passed > from one e-mail > address to the next) and > > have not had any return phone calls from the > publisher (Elesvier). > This is of course very > > disturbing especially since there is no errata on > the web site, etc. > > I'd like to know if anyone else has the book to > confirm this is a > universal problem. > > > I have spot-checked the supply at Redwing Books and > did not find any > copies with missing pages. That dosen't mean there > are not a lot of > copies with missing pages in circulation, just that > I didn't find any > in the current Redwing stock. > > You need to return the book to the company from > which you ordered the > book. Call first. Elsevier is a huge multi-billion > dollar > conglomerate and I don't doubt you've played email > tag but the persons > responsible for replacing your book are the persons > from whom you > purchased it. If you bought it from Redwing, call > Redwing; if you > bought it from Amazon, call Amazon; if you bought it > from your school > bookstore, they will arrange for a new copy with > their supplier. It > always helps to have a copy of your invoice or > receipt but most > booksellers will have a record they can access. > > Bob Felt > > ______________________________\ ____ No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go with Mail for Mobile. Get started. http://mobile./mail Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2007 Report Share Posted February 20, 2007 > You need to return the book to the company from which you ordered the > book. Thank you, I contacted Amazon and they have sent out a replacement copy. David Botton Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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