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The Oxford Companion to the Book: 2 Volumes
 
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The Oxford Companion to the Book: 2 Volumes [Box set] [Hardcover]

Michael F. Suarez , H. R. Woudhuysen
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
RRP: £195.00
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Customers buy this book with A Companion to the History of the Book (Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture) £19.99

The Oxford Companion to the Book: 2 Volumes + A Companion to the History of the Book (Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 1408 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press; 1 edition (28 Jan 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0198606532
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198606536
  • Product Dimensions: 30 x 23.6 x 13.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 450,221 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Review

At a time in our history when the future of the book is so often called into question, Oxford, as usual, produces what will likely be-for the foreseeable future-the final word on the subject, and in such a concise format. (Ken Black, Booklist )

Oxford has gone out of its way to make the work as accessible as possible. (Ken Black, Booklist )

Highly recommended for academics and large public libraries. (Ken Black, Booklist )

A bibliophile's paradise. (The Daily Telegraph )

No scholarly library can do without it...The book is well organised, cross-references and illustrated. (Michael Alexander, The Tablet )

If you like books, you'll like this one. (Michael Alexander, The Tablet )

What a delight...Just the briefest of visits to the 'OCB' ensnares the browser. (Tim Martin, Financial Times )

Fabulous...the 'Oxford Companion to the Book' is perfect. It is certainly monumental...It's also beautiful. (James McConnachie, Culture, The Sunday Times )

Delicious bookbinding features...ingenious "thematic index of entries" allows purposeful exploration. (James McConnachie, Culture, The Sunday Times )

... a godsend to challenged librarians, and to teachers of classes on any aspect of "the Book", and a rich lucky dip for the general reader. (Arthur Freeman, Times Literary Supplement )

This magnificent reference work is a tribute to - and celebration of - a revolutionary invention. (Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph )

These magnificent two volumes represent the end of an era. Buy them while you can, before the latest revolution has swept their kind aside. (Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph )

An extraordinary tour de force, a cornucopia of bookish information...These volumes, then, are a paradise for book-lovers (Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph )

Product Description

The Oxford Companion to the Book is a unique work of reference, covering the book, broadly conceived, throughout the world from ancient to modern times. It includes traditional subjects such as bibliography, palaeography, the history of printing, editorial theory and practice, textual criticism, book collecting, and libraries, but it also engages with newer disciplines such as the history of the book and the electronic book. It pays particular attention to how different societies shape books and how books shape societies. The two-volume work is organized in two parts, totalling a million words. The first part is a substantial series of introductory essays, making up about a third of the text. Nineteen of the essays provide generic histories of the subject ranging from writing systems, the ancient and the medieval book, through central aspects of book production, to theories of text, editorial theory and textual criticism, the economics of print, and the sacred book. These are complemented by 29 surveys of the history of the book around the world, including the Muslim world, Asia, Latin America, and Sub-Saharan Africa. The second part of the Companion comprises an A-Z section of over 5,000 entries on every aspect of this exceptionally rich and diverse subject, ranging from brief definitions and biographical entries to more extensive treatments of up to 2,000 words. The two parts are linked by thorough cross-referencing (both between and within the sections) and the whole is also served by a general index and a classified index of entries. The text is illustrated throughout with reproductions, diagrams, and examples of various typographical features. The contents of the book have been planned around the following scheme which aptly illustrates the breadth and depth of this most interdisciplinary of subjects: § book genres of every kind including dictionaries, government documents, and music § all aspects of the physical book, and a generous coverage of individual bookbinders, paper-makers, typographers, type-founders, and designers § authorship, including issues of attribution, authors' societies and communities, forgeries and hoaxes § the entire reproduction process over the centuries (in both Asia and the West), not forgetting individual engravers, illuminators, and illustrators § printers and publishers around the world, plus book-trade organizations, and patronage § intellectual property issues § distribution and sales, comprising international coverage of booksellers, as well as book clubs, auction houses, and advertising § preservation, covering not only libraries and library systems but also individual collectors, librarians, and professional associations § suppression of the book, including censorship and stamp acts, and issues surrounding blasphemy and pornography § scholarship, covering bibliography, editions, and scholarly centres and organizations, as well as numerous individual scholars in all parts of the world § aspects of reading and reception, including book organizations and literary prizes § a broad range of periodicals encompassing literary, professional and trade, and scholarly and bibliophile interests § named manuscripts, scripts, and individual scribes and calligraphers § individual books as exemplars of book history The Companion is the only reference book of its kind in the field. It has been written by 400 of the world's best scholars in bibliography and book history, and will have an international readership. As appropriate to its subject matter, the finished book is designed to be both exceptionally practical and aesthetically pleasing.

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9 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A real disappointment, 10 Sep 2010
This review is from: The Oxford Companion to the Book: 2 Volumes (Hardcover)
This work has received good to outstanding reviews, of the kind that raised expectations that this was a dream buy but one which might be fulfilled. If the price, not unreasonable in itself, is a problem, then it is sad to find that even libraries and major bookstores do not have a copy for inspection. Having now tracked down a set, I can only express my disappoinment; not at the content, but the failure to make the volumes 'a buy whatever the cost'. The production, binding excepted, is pedestrian. And the ill-conceived decision to split the dictionary across the two volumes is regrettable and ignores the way the work would be used.

A real disappointment. And the sad conclusion that the money needed to puchase it could be better spent. But a paperback edition (at a reasonable price) in due course would be welcome.

Higher production standards have been set by others, not least Yale UP.
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Amazon.com: 4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)

28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Book lovers' delight, 13 Mar 2010
By David Radcliffe - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Oxford Companion to the Book: 2 Volumes (Hardcover)
This volume is a departure from the usual OUP "companion" format. The first volume consists largely of substantial essays on book-related essays, the remaining pages being given over to the more conventional dictionary format. It is also physically larger: two substantial quarto volumes that are lovely to look at but comparatively unwieldy to handle.

The contents resemble some other less-useful companions in being decidedly academic in character. The professional specialties get extensive treatment, the notion of "book" is extended to cover material from the beginning of writing systems to the latest (as of a couple of years ago) in digital texts, and the prefatory essays give the history of the book global scope. There is less color and humor than one might hope for in a more companionable companion.

If the entries are small, they are useful starting-points for investigations that will inevitably lead users to the internet where space is not an issue. In that respect the OUP has done the right and indeed a very clever thing in making a kind of ur-book out of this companion: as a physical object it is the state of the art in reference-book production with lovely typography, heavy paper, and binding that shouts "I am a book!"

Indeed it is, and a timely book that fills a large gap in the shelf. No one does reference books better than OUP and they went al-out on this signature production. The price is steep but warranted by the quality of the product.

28 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Book Lovers Paradise, 6 Mar 2010
By Mike Robinson "Mike A Robinson: Apologetic An... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Oxford Companion to the Book: 2 Volumes (Hardcover)
Office desktop reference books can many times come across as spatially challenged ogres hogging slab space from more efficient Google accessible E-equipment. Not so with "The Oxford Companion to the Book," a compilation of the recorded word in all its forms and applications throughout history (1408 pages, Publisher: Oxford University Press).

Ruminate on Hieroglyphics, Cuneiform Tablets, Papyrus, The Gutenberg Bible hot off the first press, and E-books infused directly in your computer or phone.

This behemoth is a powerful and almost exhaustive work on the evolution and impact of the book. Over a million words contained in two volumes, this is a book of books and has numerous features that would blow away the swiftest fingers on the most commanding search engine.

If you find words, books, manuscripts, tomes, hardbacks, paperbacks, literature, treatises, and the like irresistible, you will take great delight in this nearly comprehensive set.

Topics incorporated within these two substantial hardbacks are:

- The work of 400 scholars from over 25 countries

- Information on fonts and print

- Ancient and modern writing instruments

- Etymology

- Philology

- Colophons

- Odd and interesting finer points of literature and word assemblages.

Vast, deep, this labor takes you where few men have been at one time in one place. Even with the wonderful new internet resources available and its large price tag--book lovers, scholars, literature buffs, and information freaks will not regret purchasing this magnificent book on books.

The Necessary Existence of God: The Proof of Christianity Through Presuppositional Apologetics

16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Admirable Artifact, 13 April 2010
By James M. - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Oxford Companion to the Book: 2 Volumes (Hardcover)
Two terrific tomes totaling 1,327 pages. The first 172 pages contain assorted essays on the physical development of the book. The next 271 pages consist of country-by-country histories of book publishing, distribution, related economic issues, etc. This section is justifiably Eurocentric and makes interesting reading. The final 884 pages comprise an alphabetic dictionary/encyclopedia of book terms, publishers, printers, collectors, booksellers, etc. This section generally does not include entries for individual authors (no Hemingway, Joyce, Milton, Dickens) but does mention a few names such as Jonson and Shakespeare with regard to their role in the history of the printed word. Specific literary works are not mentioned except for a handful of historical landmark publications.

The books are of high quality, strongly bound, and, surprisingly, lay pleasurably open for reading. I rather wish the slipcase had been traditionally bookish...the publisher's tablecloth pattern would seem more at home among the cookbooks in the kitchen than in one's library. Perhaps a nice can of leather-brown spray paint...it's an old trick but it might just work.
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