Went to Amazon.com to order this book. According to Amazon there was just one left in stock. I ordered, supposedly, the last copy. I received an email confirmation that it will be sent on November 7; this is one week away. (What would have happened if I had specified overnight delivery?) Doesn't seem to me that it was in stock. I then went back to Amazon to check on availability, which is now given as: "Availability: This item has not yet been released." What's going on?
Strangely enough I've seen this same situation before. I ordered a just released Java book and the same thing happened. You should be fine I don't remember having trouble getting it delivered. I find their inventory system "funny" anyway.
I have to defend LG here. You are the biggest stalker of them all because marketsurfer can't seem to shake you.
Coming from such a blowhard, you would know about speaking volumes. You should buy David's book -- you seem pretty close-minded about learning new stuff.
If you had taken the time to read marketsurfer's diatribes in his trend following thread among others, then you would know that he yearns to be ridiculed. Who am I to deny him his due? If you are actually defending marketsurfer and his usual postings, then do be sure to order one of his many "rare" bootleg copies of the PTJ tape. He had been selling them at about $500 a pop at one time, although I understand that market conditions are not quite as firm for that tape anymore. The last copy he reportedly sold was at a somewhat lower price. So take not: operators are standing by. As an aside, the difference between me and LG is that when I refer to marketsurfer, it is typically either in response to a post of his or to someone else's reference to him. However, as I noted in the passage that you quoted, LG referred to me for no reason in particular and entirely out of context. I suppose I should be flattered.
The other difference between you and me is that my criticism typically has a specific basis. You comment here, as elsewhere, is baseless, because I said that the book would likely make interesting reading, apart from the one caveat. On the plus side, you must save a lot of time on thinking.
I'll let the book speak for itself, not your blah blah blah opinion about it. To quote you -- your comment here, as elsewhere, is baseless.