Indexes reviewed
C. Shuttleworth
- 01 Apr 2005
TL;DR: The text includes reviews of books and articles with good indexing and comprehensive bibliographies.
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Abstract: These extracts from reviews do not pretend to represent a complete survey of all reviews in journals and newspapers. We offer only a selection from quotations that readers have sent in. Our reproduction of comments is not a stamp of approval from The Indexer upon the reviewer's assessment of an index. Extracts are arranged alphabetically under the names of publishers, within the sections: Indexes praised; Two cheers!; Indexes censured; Indexes omitted; Obiter dicta. The third and final volume also bears a cumulative index running to over 50 pages, which covers all three volumes: like the footnotes, this index places all other scholars of the period in the editors' debt, as it makes Tone's writings more accessible and easier to handle than was previously possible. The indices [sic] of subjects and names are useful, though there is no page of abbreviations. There is a good index and the book is well produced and laid out. This publication concludes with a comprehensive bibliography and index and is supplemented by a useful list of websites. This is a text to be recommended for the library staff bookshelves. Geological Society: Fluid flow and solute movement in sandstones: the onshore UK Permo-Triassic Red-Bed Sequence (Special Publication 263), ed. There is a good index which will facilitate use of the text as a reference work. A picture index at the end of the book annotates the images and provides a little insight into the creation of these works of art. Although key terms are explained in the text, there is also a useful glossary, along with a handy index and list of additional resources. His bibliography runs to 27 pages, and the book is admirably foot-noted and indexed. The book is rounded off with an extensive list of references, a subject index that reads like a who's who of plastic surgery, and some recommended further reading. There is a good index and bibliography, but it is a pity that the book has no map of Glastonbury Abbey. Apart from an invaluable eighteen-page bibliography, and a full eight-page index, A Companion to Golden Age Theatre is complemented by three appendices. Tasks: Had me made: a study of the grave memorials of Co. Sligo from c. Finally there is an exhaustive index of persons, places and themes. It is not a particularly well-organised book, though redeemed by an excellent index. .. There is a comprehensive index and a …
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