Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

Ah that makes more sense now. Confusing cross cultural slang. It was shocking to see how little the expensive version the author passed up was.



Especially considering how poor the knock-off Indian domestic reprints are. Everything is smudgy and looks like it was printed on newsprint (either standard or glossy -- it varies), without trimmed edges and with a horrifically bad binding.


IMO, while it's nice to own a copy of a book that looks good and doesn't fall apart, the awful thing here is not the cosmetics but the fact that the copy is a mangled-up version with errors that have been fixed in editions over a decade ago.

You need to be able to trust a book. I received a misprint of a book I ordered online once, duplicate pages, missed half a chapter. I didn't need that particular chapter for the course I was taking then, and it was a week before the exam so I didn't send it back, it's a really cool book (Computational Geometry) that, like other interesting study books, I would pick up again and browse occasionally, if it weren't for this mess up. It's a shame, really.


Yes. And since most books usually bought are Indian editions, we rarely realize how great the original editions can be.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: