The Fifty-Nine Icosahedra was originally published in 1938 as No. 6 of
"University of Toronto Studies (Mathematical Series)". Of the four
authors, only Coxeter and myself are still alive, and we two are the
authors of the whole text of the book, in which any signs of immaturity
may perhaps be regarded leniently on noting that both of us were still
in our twenties when it was written. N either of the others was a
professional mathematician. Flather died about 1950, and Petrie,
tragically, in a road accident in 1972. Petrie's part in the book
consisted in the extremely difficult drawings which consti- tute the
left half of each of the plates (the much simpler ones on the right
being mine). A brief biographical note on Petrie will be found on p. 32
of Coxeter's Regular Polytopes (3rd. ed., Dover, New York, 1973); and it
may be added that he was still a schoolboy when he discovered the
regular skew polygons that are named after him, and are the occasion for
the note on him in Coxeter's book. (Coxeter also was a schoolboy when
some of the results for which he will be most remembered were obtained;
he and Petrie were schoolboy friends and used to work together on
polyhedron and polytope theory. ) Flather's part in the book consisted
in making a very beautiful set of miniature models of all the fifty-nine
figures. These are still in existence, and in excellent preservation.