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Richard Miller

Richard Miller is composed of at least 9 distinct authors.

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Books by Richard Miller

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Richard Miller is composed of at least 9 distinct authors (edit assignments). LibraryThing has only recently introduced this feature. In the near future distinct authors will have their own pages.

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    Richard Miller (9)

    Richard Miller (unknown)

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    Several authors have the name Richard Miller:
    (1) Richard Miller, 1926- , wrote seven books on singing and is also credited as an editor on other musical works;
    (2) Richard Miller, 1925- , wrote Snail, Mosca, Squed, Sowboy, and Coyote;
    (3) Richard Miller, who has produced a line a yoga books and media;
    (4) Richard K. Miller, the mathematician who wrote An Introduction to Differential Equations;
    (5) Richard B. Miller, the political scientist, who wrote Why Christians Don't Vote for Democrats and edited War In the 20th Century (there is no true author, so he is credited by many owners as the author);
    (6) Richard F. Miller, who wrote Harvard's Civil War;
    (7) Richard Miller, 1942- , who wrote Chihuahuas;
    (8) and (9) it is assumed that The Town & Country World of Golf and the Templo de la Sagrada Familia (a papercraft scale model booklet) were written by two separate authors;
    It is unknown with the current information available if the final book, The Most Unusual Person in the World, was written by one the previous authors or not.
    Richard Miller, 1942- wrote Chihuahuas; and (4) Richard Miller, 1953- wrote Managing Difficult Patients. (6) Richard F. Miller wrote Harvard's Civil War, the single copy here was entered from amazon.com. (7) Richard Miller did not write The secret Paris of the 30's (he's the translator), the books have been combined on the right work page. (8) The Yoga books are most likely by another Richard Miller.

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    Author Disambiguation

    How many authors?

    Richard Miller is currently considered a "single author." If one or more works are by a distinct, homonymous authors, go ahead and split the author.

    This entry includes…

    • Richard Miller

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    What?

    Q: What is this feature for/why is it necessary?

    A: Because LibraryThing draws from so many different libraries, it can't enforce a single name for a given author. "Also known as" lets LibraryThing users combine author's names easily, so collections match up and everything runs smoothly.

    Q: Can I combine with an author not suggested above?

    A: Yes you can.

    Q: I know an author is separate, but someone keeps combining them! Can I take a name off the combination list?

    A: Yes you can.

    Look up! Everything in the "Combine with..." section now has a link to "never combine." Use this feature wisely. "Marc Twain" may be idiotic, but misspelling should still be combined. "Mark Twain" and "Edward Gibbon" should not.

    Q: What authors have already been slated to "never combine" with this author?

    A: No authors.

    Q: I am the someone and I'm right!

    A: Take it to the Combiners group.

    Become a member to do this.

     

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