User talk:Lexigator/Books/London & Dornach

=3 / 4 volume version= Bringing into alignment the four volumes now being titled 01, 1, 2, 3, comprising a set Putting Two & Two Together  About Qexigator's further edits for Now (August 2012) further aligned for vols 1-3 to be a set separate from vol.01, by removing some articles from vol.3 which are retained in 01, and copying others from 01 into 3.
 * Placemaking: The Royal Exchange & The Goetheanum ~Putting Two & Two Together (vol. 01)
 * Civilizing Europe: Triumphal and other monuments ~Putting Two & Two Together (vol. 1)
 * The Goetheanum, Dornach ~Putting Two & Two Together (vol.2)
 * London & Dornach ~Putting Two & Two Together (vol. 3).
 * Removed: [[Cornhill, London [[Edward I'Anson [[Exchange (organized market) [[Gresham Hotel [[Gresham Palace [[Gresham Street [[Jonathan's Coffee-House [[Liveryman [[London International Financial [[Futures Exchange [[Richard Westmacott (the younger) [[Third oldest university in England debate [[Threadneedle Street [[William Dauntsey [[Worshipful Company of Mercers.
 * Copied: >Royal Exchange, London >Thomas Gresham >Gresham College >Gesamtkunstwerk >Dodecahedron >Projective geometry >Trapezium Cluster >Trapezoid.

Qexigator (talk) 17:06, 14 August 2012 (UTC)

According to Pediapress the number of pages and price for these volumes as books are:


 * Civilizing Europe: Triumphal and other monuments ~Putting Two & Two Together (vol. 1) about 324 pages £13.33 / US$20.93 / 16.96€


 * The Goetheanum, Dornach ~Putting Two & Two Together (vol.2) about 236 pages £10.56 / US$16.58 / 13.44€

Qexigator (talk) 20:15, 14 August 2012 (UTC)
 * London & Dornach ~Putting Two & Two Together (vol. 3) about 419 pages £16.32 / US$25.62 / 20.76€

=Preferred version?=

In an earlier version of Nov 2010 Lexigator[] had combined the more relevant articles of these volumes into one with the title Putting Two & Two Together (1-3) ~The Royal Exchange & The Goetheanum, about 498 pages £18.80 / US$29.51 /23.92€.

Qexigator commends this version above the others, expecting that anyone interested would prefer it, either as it is or as a basis for creating a similar book, with the further advantage that when ordering the book from Pediapress, the user is now able to add a preface of his/her own (which was not then possible). Qexigator (talk) 23:01, 14 August 2012 (UTC)