
From Booklist
Here is the latest edition of a guide that ârepurposes the ideas, principles, and practical wisdomâ found in The Craft of Research (3rd ed., 2008) and A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations (7th ed., 2007). The editors have simplified and updated many of the ideas and principles for beginning college students. Starting with an introduction (âWhy Research?â), the book is divided into three parts. Part 1 (âWriting Your Paperâ) explains the research process, finding a question, planning an argument, taking notes, preventing plagiarism, and writing and then revising a draft. Part 2 (âCiting Sourcesâ) covers the need to cite sources and describes the three most popular citation styles in detail, and Part 3 (âStyleâ) includes the usual rules for spelling, punctuation, capitalization, and grammar. Three appendixes include a glossary of grammatical terms, specific tips on formatting a paper, and resources for research and writing. An excellent index provides page numbers instead of the more cumbersome outline numerals. Blue boxes highlight important or helpful tips (âVerbs for Introducing a Quotation or Paraphraseâ; âWrite for Target Readers, Not Your Teacherâ). Excellent up-to-date analogies and specific examples also make this very user-friendly. The newest MLA style is used (no URLs for material cited from the Web). However, advice about using recordable CDs (not flash drives) when using a public computer already seems outdated. Librarians will love reading that the purpose of learning to research is âfinding information we can trustâ and students should âwatch out for Wikipedia.â Instructors may appreciate online suggestions at http://www.turabian.org/turabian_instructor_guide.pdf. This guide should be in every high-school, college, and public library. --Susan Gooden
About the Author
Joseph M. Williams (1933–2008) was professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago and the author of Style: Toward Clarity and Grace. He is also coauthor, with Wayne C. Booth and Gregory G. Colomb, of the best-selling guide The Craft of Research, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
-
-