I don't own any yet. (Not quite true, I think I have an atrocious Anglesey druid head type around here somewhere) But, I did find this today on Google books. The first book on them, by James Conder himself! http://books.google.com/books?id=Ej...s=&num=100&as_brr=0&cd=1#v=onepage&q=&f=false
Thank you for the link. In a previous post, conder101 provided much information on Conder books. Here is the link: http://www.cointalk.com/t50857/
http://thecondercabinet.homestead.com/DUBLIN408.html With all the crime stories here at CT, This token fits...
There is a digital version of D&H due to come out in early 2010...completely reformatted content, searchable, clickable links, price analysis and that good stuff.
If you know where to buy it or have further information, would you please post it here (on this post or give me a PM). Thanks & Merry Christmas Collect89
That's great news, when it's available could you please post the link here? Heck, that just made my day!
Very fitting (especially for me right now!), wish I had that one! I just got the D&H book from this guy: Charles Davis - Numislit@aol.com Numismatic Literature P.O. Box 547 Wenham, MA 01984 Tel: (978) 468 2933 Fax: (978) 468 7893 http://www.vcoins.com/ancient/charlesdavis I also have a few pretty Conders that I recently bought....
Sure thing. There will be an ad for it in the next CTCC journal. Integrated rarity ratings, integrated addenda and corrigenda, individual token searching as well as general search capabilities, lots of intra-doc links, a price analysis study and wads of introductory material including an article on the history composed by George Selgin.
I believe that digital book is a price guide not really a digital D&H. I would be pleased to find out I'm wrong though. There is a pdf version of D&H available on the web. The scans are not the greatest but it is usable. It is of the 1990 edition of D&H. File size is 118 MB. I won't publish the link because it does technically constitute a copyright problem. But if you are interested in it contact me.
I have heard through the grapevine that there are now two resources due out in 2010. One is the price guide and the other a digital Conder token reference as mentioned in the previous posts.
Books on Demand To read the complete article, see: Google Lets You Custom-Print Millions of Public Domain Books
Good Money from Birmingham I relied on this book Selgin, George. Good Money: Birmingham Button Makers, the Royal Mint, and the Beginnings of Modern Coinage, 1775-1821. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2008. to write these paragraphs for a sociology class term paper on money as the technology of ritual exchange.