New Publications George M. Eberhart American Music in the Twentieth Cen­ nese-American name styles and customs, and tury, by Kyle Gann (400 pages, December identifying a Chinese surname character. An 1997), surveys the art music composed in the appendix provides a list of common surnames United States from the tone poems of Charles and their Chinese characters. $32.50. Ives to the total ism of Mikel Rouse. Writ ten McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0418-3. for the general reader with a basic knowledge If Chinese ethnic groups are your inter­ of music, the book covers ultramodernism in est, consult An Ethnohistoricαl Dictio­ the 1920s, populism in the 1930s, experimen- nary of China, by James S. Olson (434 talism, atonality, John Cage and the New York pages, March 1998). Every significant anthro­ School, post-Cage conceptualism, minimalism, pological and linguistic group is described new romanticism, electronic music, rock and here, not just the 55 minority “nationalities” jazz fusion, postminimalism, and totalism. Each officially recognized by the People’s Repub­ chapter offers a discussion of recommended lic. An extensive essay on China’s largest musical examples and concise composer bi­ ethnic group, the Han, covers their history ographies. An essential guide for those who from the Neolithic to the 1990s. $89.50. want to move beyond Mahler and Brahms. Greenwood. ISBN 0-313-28853-4. $39.00. Schirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-864655-X. Schirmer has also published a revised, con­ The International Director of Univer­ cise edition of Daniel Kingman’s American sity Histories, edited by Carol Summerfield Music: A Panorama (433 pages, March and Mary Elizabeth Devine (780 pages, April 1998), which covers folk and ethnic music, 1998), is actually a collection of historical es­ blues, country, rock, popular sacred music, says on 168 selected academic institutions pop from colonial times to the present, jazz, worldwide. The editors have chosen diverse and classical music. Though written as a text­ types of universities with differing education book, it is equally useful as a quick reference requirements, regional demands, and philo­ source. $25.00. ISBN 0-02-864614-2. sophical goals. Slightly less than half are U.S. schools, allowing for comparisons with a wide Charging and Collecting Fees and set of overseas counterparts. Histories of older Fines, by Murray S. Martin and Betsy Park institutions are not limited to 19th- and 20th- (146 pages, May 1998), offers suggestions for century summaries; for example, the entry for a cost-benefit analysis of fee structures for cir­ Cairo’s Al-Azhar University starts right in at its culation services, photocopying, interlibrary founding in 972 A.D. A comprehensive index loan, reference services, Internet access, co­ enhances access. $125.00. Fitzroy Dearborn, operative library services, and other library cost 70 E. Walton St., Chicago, IL 60611, ISBN 1- centers. The authors’ approach is a practical 884964-23-0. one, with many checklists and worksheets. $49.95. Neal-Schuman. ISBN 1-55570-318-6. A Stephen Crane Encyclopedia, by Stanley Wertheim (413 pages, December Chinese American Names: Tradition 1997), catalogs the life, writings, friends, and and Transition, by Emma Woo Louie (230 activities of this American journalist and pages, July 1998), explains the mysteries of novelist who, though best known for his how Chinese immigrants acquired American­ Civil War novel The Red Badge of Cour­ ized names like Lee, Woo, or Chen. The first age (1895), was one of the first to write section of the book describes traditional Chi­ realistically about urban slums and the re­ nese naming conventions, while others ex­ treat of the frontier. This well-organized and plore names as clues to regional origin, Chi- comprehensive guide is an essential pur­ chase for collections of American history and George M. Eberhart is associate editor of American fiction of the 1890s. $85.00. Greenwood Libraries; e-mail: [email protected] Press, ISBN 0-313-29692-8. 530 /C&RL News ■ July/August 1998 Disaster Response and Planning for Li­ The Evolution of the Book, by OCLC braries, by Miriam B. Kahn (128 pages, 1998), founder Frederick G. Kilgour (180 pages, is filled with practical advice on planning for April 1998), reviews the history of book pro­ and recovering from various types of disas­ duction from clay tablets to computers, span­ ters. Emphasizing the importance of a detailed, ning roughly 4,500 years of civilization. As workable disaster plan, Kahn enumerates the might be expected, the role of libraries in duties of a disaster response team and recom­ knowledge dissemination is emphasized. mends that priorities for recovery be in place Kilgour identifies seven “punctuated equi­ before a disaster occurs. The book is filled libria” in the history of the book: clay tab­ with suggestions on how to salvage different lets (2500 B.C.), papyrus rolls (2000 B.C.), media, checklists and forms, and contacts for codices (150 A.D.), printing (1450), steam additional assistance and supplies. $34.20. ALA power (1800), offset printing (1970), and Editions. ISBN 0-8389-0716-4. electronic books (2000). Other inventions such as paper, eyeglasses, indexes, title The Encyclopedia of Mummies, by Bob pages, typewriters, and hypertext are ex­ Brier (256 pages, February 1998), should serve amined in context. $35.00. Oxford Univer­ as a useful reference for all those questions in­ sity. ISBN 0-19-511 859-6. spired by undergraduate interests in Egyptology If this title gets you excited about and horror films. Mummies created by both natu­ bibliology, then you will also want to read ral and artificial means are included, along with Cuneiform to Computer: A History of mummy lore and legend. A directory of muse­ Reference Sources, by William A. Katz (417 ums that house mummies and an adequate sub­ pages, April 1998). Beginning with the ject bibliography are included. $35.00. Facts premise that “Reference books reflect the on File. ISBN 0-8160-3108-8. will of the compiler who … mirrored the A much more detailed study of the 20th- place and period in which he lived,” Katz century preservation of human remains is delves deeply into reference history to re­ Modern Mummies, by Christine Quigley (263 veal the origin and development of ency­ pages, June 1998), which incorporates carni­ clopedias, quotation books, almanacs, hand­ val mummies, religious incorruptibility, freak books, dictionaries, maps, travel guides, bi­ accidents, mortuary science, and cryogenics. ographies, bibliographies, indexes, and gov­ $35.00. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0492-2. ernment documents. Every page is filled with C&RL News ■ July/August 1998 / 531 facts that you can drop casually at the next on Constantine, and he recounts the bio­ cocktail party or budget hearing: “Chatty graphical details in an easy-going manner, chronicles, as much fiction as fact, became supplemented by notes, maps and coins of the popular reference works of the 13th and the period, and a bibliography. Find out here 14th centuries”; “The Great Exhibition of All why the Milvian Bridge was so important in Nations, held in London in 1851, was not European history. $24.95. Rutledge Books, only symbolic of the Industrial Age, but a Box 315, 8 F.J. Clarke Circle, Bethel, CT gold mine for guidebook publishers”; and 06801-0315. ISBN 1-887750-61-4 “The first modern indexes were conceived as a method of analyzing the contents of The New Mexico Atlas & Gazetteer the Bible.” $46.00. Scarecrow. ISBN 0-8108- (72 pages, May 1998) is the latest state to­ 3290-9. pographic atlas in the DeLorme series, which has been inching its way towards covering The First Men in the Moon, by H. G. all 50 states by the year 2000. Company pub­ Wells and edited by Leon Stover (321 pages, licist Andy Sturtevant said that when it is August 1998), is the latest in a series of texts done mapping the United States, DeLorme of Wells’ first editions, extensively annotated will develop atlases for other countries, and analyzed by Stover, who argues per­ possibly in Eastern Europe where road at­ suasively that the 1901 novel is in keeping lases are scarce. The level of detail that goes with the author’s espousal of Saint-Simonian into these maps is prodigious— they are es­ scientific utopianism. The notes demonstrate sential tools for any cross-country travel by that Wells was well-read in science as well foot or car, and indispensable purchases for as in the literature of fanciful travel beyond map libraries. Other recent atlases are South the earth. Future critical texts of The Invis­ Carolina, Georgia, and Iowa (April 1998); ible Man, War of the Worlds, and When the Indiana and Oklahoma (March 1998); and Sleeper Wakes are planned. $55.00. Missouri (January 1998). Prices vary, but McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0411-6. most are $16.95. DeLorme, Two DeLorme Drive, Yarmouth, ME 04096. Grasses, Sedges, Rushes & Ferns of Britain and Northern Europe, by R. Fit­ Ol’ Blue Eyes: A Frank Sinatra Ency­ ter, et al. (256 pages, 1984), is just one of clopedia, by Leonard Mustazza (436 pages, the many pocket nature guides, field guides, April 1998), was in print prior to Sinatra’s and safari guides published by HarperCollins death, so the author can’t be accused of op­ UK that are for the first time being distrib­ portunism; however, it is not a true “every­ uted in the United States. Although the spe­ thing you’d ever want to know” encyclo­ cies described are European, there is a con­ pedia. Primarily consisting of annotated lists siderable overlap with North America. The of all Sinatra songs, albums, films, radio and taxonomic and biological notes, as well as TV shows, Web sites, major concerts, the detailed illustrations, are excellent awards, and recording sessions, the book is throughout the series, which covers both more vita than biography.
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