Author Does Right Where Publisher Once Went Wrong
Michel Cuhaci ordered a book from Amazon, only to discover it was an unreadable misprint copy. He made sure that the one-star review of the book made this known. Little did he know, the Author of that book was reading the reviews. And little did he know, that author is a Certified Bad Ass.
Dan Fleisch went out of his way, spending nearly $500 to to fly to Canada, to make sure that Michel got a good copy of his book, "A Student's Guide to Maxwell's Equation". Oh yeah, and this was all on Christmas Eve. After exhausting nearly every other option, he finally decided to test fate and huff it out himself.
He took another look at the weather. It appeared there'd be a break in the snow by morning.
At 6 a.m. Christmas Day Fleisch was sitting in a plane at the Dayton airport waiting to head north.
"I'm sitting there. The plane is fairly empty, and I think, 'Am I nuts?'
Michel seemed bewildered, but more confusing than this was Michel's reaction to the whole event.
Last week Cuhaci went back to Amazon and added a new comment about the book and its author.
"But I did not change the rating," he said. "I want people to look at my comment and see what a dedicated author he is."
Umm.. Michel, I know you want some light on this story, but do the man a favor and give him the 5-star rating he deserves. We've spoken about the rating system's power in the past, and that amazing 5-star story s going to do a lot more for the book than an amazing one-star review. Sometimes the best customer service comes from the people behind the products, and not the businesses behind them, and Dan Fleisch is a shining example of that. Kudos.
[Dayton Daily News]
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Comments:
@MissPeacock: yes! I also hate when people give a PC game 1 star because they "had trouble installing it" but then say it is an awesome game with no other flaws. So one flaw = one star??
I'm surprised nobody has posted a link to the actual Amazon.com review yet, so here it is:
@MissPeacock: Many of the responses to the OP's review state the same. And it seems that he got the book and gave the rating without contacting Amazon. He says that he will contact for a refund but not that he did before the review.
Excellent response by the author. Well above and beyond. And yes, the review should be changed to 5 stars.
@MissPeacock: I heard this story on NPR, and I still cannot decide if this is super-cool of the author or if it's stalker-scary!
@MissPeacock: Dr. Fleisch is pretty much one of the coolest guy's you can ever meet. I had him for an Intro to Astronomy course at Wittenberg University a few years back. He was easily one of the best professors at Witt.
I am buying this book just to support the author. After the lack of customer service I just received from CapitalOne, I wish this story would be crammed down their throat. They could learn, who am I kidding? They couldn't learn anything. It would be like trying to teach a flea about nuclear reactions. Mr Fleish, you get the bad ass of the century award! I grant you an Honorary Doctorate in customer service. Likely the only one to ever be so well deserved.
@Trick: A book like that is seriously going to need it. Maxwell's equations are heavy duty stuff: they condense all the physics of electricity and magnetism into four brain-bending equations. There's an apt nerd T-shirt that goes something like: In the beginning, God said ((insert Maxwell's equations here)) ... and there was light.
@dave511: I know it's not the biggest airport ever, but it's not that hard to believe you didn't see him, unless you see every person who goes through on a given day.
@Plates: OK, but they are a scam for the publishers, not the authors. Do you really think that math profs are making the big bucks writing textbooks?
@EmperorOfCanada: I'm confused by what you mean. That person is saying: I would change it to a 5 star rating, but it doesn't allow the rating to be changed.
I think he should add another five-star review and link to it from a comment within the original, at the very least...though he does need to learn not to give it a one-star rating because of something the author had no control over. I get irked by people who use ratings to vent their issues with shipping and whatnot, instead of focusing on the actual product.
@Eric1285: I read them all. I have a kid and find the reviews very telling about how well things are made. Obviously not about a book of course...
@MissPeacock: He's definitely the coolest.
Now if he hung around like the house guest that wouldn't leave and offered to read his entire book to Michel, then that would have been creepy...
@ChasityKliker: I look for the longer reviews because those usually explain the rating. Sometimes the longer positive reviews will explain why they disagree with the negative ones. I do agree that the lower ratings are more likely to give reasons for the rating though.
@CmdX: Yup, I just purchased the book now. :)
(Not to mention I'm an engineering student and the sample pages look AMAZING.)



















And also, a book like that can't possibly have a ton of ratings. I mean, it's a guide to equations! Give the man the 5-star rating he deserves.