Yikes! All this YELLING hurts my ears...
You have to be plum out of yer mind to pay $85 for a star atlas. Maybe all you rich guys with yer high falutin' razzle dazzle computer powered electronic telescopes need to have your coordinates down to 1/1,000,000th of an arc second. For the rest of us here's my home brew remedy...
4 parts whiskey 1 part ice.....er...no not that. Nevermind.
1) Orion's "The Sky" Comes free with any scope purchase. Mine's a few years old and when I still zoom all the way in on Jupiter, the moons are in their accurate positions still. My reckoning is that if all 4 moons are still "dead on" then the stars gotta still be pretty darn close to exact also.
2) Meade's planetarium (I don't use it but if you own a Meade LPI, DSI, DSI II or DSI III then you already have it. It comes bundleded with Autostar suite.
3)Just buy Astronomy's "Atlas of the Stars". I think the last printing was 2006. Not sure though but it's got everything down to (X?) magnitude.
I mean, what's the purpose of spending $85 on a book that has the same accuracy as a $14 magazine. Plus, I'd assume the book to be pretty big and heavy. I would be afraid to take it outside for fear of damaging it. With the magazine, I take it out and fold it back all the time. It's light enough that I can hold it against the sky for orientation. Try that with your giant Encyclopedia Brittanica's Sky Atlas of Everything in the Stinking Universe Volume XIX....
Now...where was I...oh yeah. Ice.