Agreed. There is likely no sufficient relation between these distinct articles so that they can be relied upon together.
Even different parts of a single reference may not be good enough for a 102. A shout out to Karen's excellent blog:
http://allthingspros.blogspot.com/2011/05/bpai-anticipation-multiple-embodiments.html
The question - as I see it - isn't whether an examiner can use multiple references in a 102, or whether multiple embodiments may be combined in a 102. Rather the question is: does a single book, consisting of multiple chapters/articles, qualify as a single reference for 102 purposes?
The answer to that question, I am pretty sure, is yes, since a book is a single printed publication, even if it include multiple chapters or articles. If I recall correctly, there was a case holding that a gigantic reference, composed of many, many different sub-sections or sub-articles was a single printed publication. I can't seem to find the case, though.
Now, as someone above noted, a 102 rejection requires not just a single publication, but that all of the claim elements are found within the publication arranged as in the claim. In other words, the examiner cannot pick and choose different elements from different sub-articles, unless the book fairly teaches that they are related as claimed (which seems unlikely). But that is a separate issue, and doesn't prevent the book from qualifying as a single prior art reference.
I suppose that's sorta fair, and it really comes down to facts that we don't have from the original post.
When I read the question, I got in my head that he was talking about something like a journal (as an EE guy, say, Electronics Letters or something from IEEE or whatever) with a bunch of articles. In such a case, even if all the articles are bound together in one book, it is pretty clear that each article is unrelated to the next and is a distinct reference for prior art purposes. But that's an extreme example.
If instead it is more like a book with different chapters, then you're right that is much more possible to be a single reference, but you'd still have the problem of whether all the chapters/articles are really talking about the same thing, so the teachings can be related and applied together so that it could be considered a single embodiment where all the claimed stuff is arranged as claimed. Possible, though tougher when you're picking different things from different places in a reference, it's impossible to say without specifics.
So I guess the best answer, like many hypos, is we can't really say on these facts. If you're just picking and choosing from different and not really related parts of a big reference, probably no to 102 (b/c you run into the combining different embodiments problem). If all the teachings that you're using are all related to the same thing, even if in different "articles" whatever that may be, maybe yes.