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Not a Book connundrum
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This Is Not The Michael You're Looking For
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Mar 17, 2013 04:22PM

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It could be that this ISBN is doubled-up. Book details can be found on the publisher's website: http://store.doverpublications.com/04...
Emy, I actually am a super, but have no idea how to deal with this issue. I think you need an uber-super like rivka to deal with this.
Unless there's more to it than the blurb indicates, that looks like it has origami models and not much more. Sounds like a valid NAB to me.



No ISBN. Too early. But here is the edit page:
http://www.goodreads.com/book/edit/36... if anyone wants to look at it.

Origami books are not like paper doll books; you don't cut out a "model" and play with it! They're more like cookbooks or coding references. I have certainly always considered them books!

I agree. If other instructional craft books are allowed to be a part of the database, I don't see why this one shouldn't be. (And as a matter of fact, there are several other origami books listed in the data base. --- starting with the fourth book down.)

No indication from the edits who nabbed it, or that it was nabbed at all.

And many paper doll books are not like paper doll books, either. There are tons and tons from the Dover imprint which people buy, collect, and use as references, usually fashion/costuming, or purely for historical interest. Trust me, I have un-Nabbed probably hundreds of these in the database. Most of them have explanatory text, too, which is an additional reason that (according to Goodreads' rules in which text matters more than images...) they should not be Nabbed.

I like the new method of NABbing but I wish there were a way for librarians to reverse it in cases like this!


Frequently enough, when checking for librarian edits, there either are none, or the book is marked as having been changed by an import source. Of course these can be easily reversed by making a correction; still, maybe that's a source of the problem too.

Wait, so when you NAB a book it is now gone forever?
I...I think I'm going to be a little too scared to use that feature now.
Developers can rescue them. I put in a request, but it may be a while before anyone gets to them.

I wonder how this is being done. Are they actually using the NAB "media type" (which as far as I know had always been ignored by the system since it was introduced) or is it based on the fake author/title we've been using to sort the NAB's away from the other texts? If they're using the media type and simply refusing to show a NAB in any sort of result (general search, author book list, etc.) it's actually way more convenient to NAB an item because we no longer have to change the author name to move all of those items out of their lists. The system just doesn't show them.
We just potentially need a special way to view/review NAB'd items for fixing errors (e.g., a list that only librarians (or super- can access) or a special flag in the search parameters that would override the NAB suppression. Obviously, we can send word to the developers when we find these, but its harder to discover the errors are there. I only found out when I tried to add the book...when I searched and it wasn't there I almost didn't bother because I was just trying to get info, not shelve it.

Many NAB'd items (especially if were ever shelved or reviewed) are still listed on the site as they always have been.
These are only the ones that have been NAB'd via the link on the book's edit page, which only exists for books with no shelvings.
These are only the ones that have been NAB'd via the link on the book's edit page, which only exists for books with no shelvings.

I was going to say that the irreversible NAB shouldn't be overly troublesome based on the fact that you can't use the button when a book has been shelved by anyone.
But then I've thought of all the NABs I've personally reverted. Many, many librarians have incorrectly NABbed music books by Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation. Less than 20% of the books on that profile have been added by users - but they are still books and someone could add them at a later date. The same could be said for Books LLC where only 15% of books have been shelved.
The NAB author is definitely an inelegant way of handling the issue and I do like the idea of making books properly deemed NAB go away, but I feel like it needs some sort of check and balance system. Even if it was as primitive as dumping NABed books into a queue somewhere where supers could release them to NABland or cancel the change (which would, preferably, keep books from being able to be NABed again).

Maybe once the supers released the NAB, the system could auto-append a note saying "cleared by GR as a book" or something more elegantly worded...
Mass-NABs like music books are highly unlikely to have been done using the link, as it would have to be done for each and every edition of each and every work.
Items from Books LLC and similar sources are no longer being imported to Goodreads, as was announced a while back. Existing one with no shelvings may have been moved to NAB, but no shelved ones were touched.
Items from Books LLC and similar sources are no longer being imported to Goodreads, as was announced a while back. Existing one with no shelvings may have been moved to NAB, but no shelved ones were touched.


It depends; if it was NABbed using the old system (typing NOT A BOOK in the author field) it can be recovered. If it was NABbed using the one-click system on the book edit page, it's gone forever unless a developer can retrieve it. Or it can be added without the ISBN in the latter case, but of course that's an incomplete record.

Authors mentioned in this topic
Hal Leonard Corporation (other topics)Books LLC (other topics)