Author: John WatersAlso known as: John Waters
Disambiguation Notice
This page lists several persons: John Waters (b. 1946), American filmmaker John M. Waters is the author of Bloody winter and additional works can be found at John M. Waters John Frederick Waters (b. 1930) is the author of Crime labs and additional works can be found at John Frederick Waters John Kevin Waters is the author of Diablo, the official strategy guide and additional works can be found at John K. Waters John Waters (b. 1955) is the author of An intelligent person’s guide to modern Ireland; Jiving at the crossroads; The Politburo has decided you are unwell; and Race of angels John Waters (b. 1942) is the author of The real business of web design
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Disambiguation NoticeThis page lists several persons: John Waters (b. 1946), American filmmaker John M. Waters is the author of Bloody winter and additional works can be found at John M. Waters John Frederick Waters (b. 1930) is the author of Crime labs and additional works can be found at John Frederick Waters John Kevin Waters is the author of Diablo, the official strategy guide and additional works can be found at John K. Waters John Waters (b. 1955) is the author of An intelligent person’s guide to modern Ireland; Jiving at the crossroads; The Politburo has decided you are unwell; and Race of angels John Waters (b. 1942) is the author of The real business of web design Combine with…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 some infernal idiot 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 infernal idiot and I'm right! A: Take it to the Combiners group.Q: What if the disambiguation notice is wrong? A: Go ahead and edit it. Become a member to do this. |
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