ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 1 6 4 / C&RL News ■ M arch 2004 N e w P u b l i c a t i o n s George M. Eberhart All Politics Is Local, by Christopher Collier (224 pages, December 2003), tries to answer a ques­ tion that has often been asked but rarely analyzed: What did the framers of the U.S. Constitution expect to gain from this new experiment in de­ mocracy? And, more specifically, at the Constitu­ tional Convention of 1787, what led the delegates from Connecticut, especially the 40 antifederalists in a former colony known as a vigorous propo­ nent of its own rights, to agree to a strong central government? Collier finds that the answer was not ideology, but a variety of family, militia, eco­ nomic, and personal concerns and connections in an extremely local context. This intriguing ap­ proach could prove enlightening if applied to other states as well. University Press of New England. $39.95. ISBN 1-58465-290-X. Conflict in Afghanistan: A Historical Ency­ clopedia, by Frank A. Clements (376 pages, De­ cember 2003), is a guide to key Afghan figures, organizations, historical events, and customs from the creation of the modem state in 1747, through the three Anglo-Afghan Wars and the Soviet in­ vasion, up to U.S. operations through August 2003. Nearly 400 entries with references, accompanied by 50 photographs and a 55-page chronology, help to explain this remote, exotic nation. $85.00. ABC- CLIO. ISBN 1-85109-402-4. Developing and Maintaining Practical Ar­ chives, by Gregory S. Hunter (456 pages, 2d ed., October 2003), covers all aspects of organizing and maintaining an archival program for any type of organization, but especially special collections and corporate libraries. This new edition has three additional chapters on audiovisual archives, man­ agement, and the nature of the archival profes­ sion, and it has many checklists, photos, helpful suggestions, and topical bibliographies. $65.00. Neal-Schuman. ISBN 1-55570-467-0. A companion volume, Building Digital Ar­ chives, Descriptions, and Displays, by Frederick Stielow (229 pages, October 2003), offers tech­ nical tips for Web-based archives. $75.00. ISBN 1-55570-463-8. George M. Eberhart is senior e d ito r o f Am erican Libraries, e-mail: geberhart@ala.org Doing Their Bit: Wartime American Ani­ mated Short Films, 1939-1945, by Michael S. Shull and David E. Wilt (246 pages, 2d ed., March 2004), is an analysis and annotated filmography of historical and political material found in cartoons released to the general U.S. public during World War II. One important sec­ tion that did not appear in the first edition in 1987 is a chapter on the Private Snafu cartoons, produced by Warner Brothers and distributed to military bases in Europe and the Pacific. This se­ ries, which warned GIs about the dangers of loose talk and various diseases, featured the talents of Friz Freleng, Frank Tashlin, Ted (“Dr. Seuss”) Geisel, Phil Eastman, Carl Stalling, and Mel Blanc. $38.50. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-1555-X. Coauthor Wilt has also written a monumen­ tal Mexican Filmography, 1916 through 2001 (778 pages, December 2003), a comprehensive list of feature-length films arranged chronologically with an English-language synopsis for each. $195.00. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-1537-1. Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World, edited by Richard C. Martin (823 pages, 2 vols., December 2003), presents more than 500 essays by an international group of some 500 schol­ ars on all aspects of Muslim life. The entries de­ scribe individuals (al-Tabari, Salman Rushthe), empires (Abbasid, Ottoman), culture (cartogra­ phy, calligraphy, law), sociology (homosexuality, public roles of women), ideologies (fundamental­ ism, pan-Islam, modernism), regions (Africa, the Americas, Southeast Asia), religion (‘Ibadat, the Qur’an, Shi'a), and places (Fez, Karbala, Qom). A three-page entry on Islamic libraries has been in­ cluded. Edited carefully to make it easy on readers with little knowledge of Islam, these volumes are an excellent source for understanding the modem religion within its 1,400-year historical context. Appendixes include a glossary and several gene­ alogies and timelines. $265.00. Macmillan Refer­ ence USA. ISBN 0-02-865603-2. Macmillan’s The Encyclopedia o f Buddhism, ed­ ited by Robert E. Buswell Jr. (981 pages, 2 vols., October 2003), offers a similar scope for a reli­ gion that is approximately 1,000 years older and perhaps even less understood by most Americans. The 470 entries cover Buddhist doctrines, writ- mailto:geberhart@ala.org C&RL News ■ M arch 2004 / 165 ings, culture, politics, concepts, folk religion, mon­ asteries, and individuals. $265.00. ISBN 0-02- 865718-7. Fossil Frogs and Toads of North America, by J. Alan Holman (246 pages, January 2004), contains detailed systematic descriptions of fossil anurans and the localities in North America where they occurred. Holman provides illustrations and modem descriptions for species that are still liv­ ing, and in the last chapter he gives a chronologi­ cal overview of frogs and toads from the Meso­ zoic to the Pleistocene. $79.95. Indiana University. ISBN 0-253-34280-6. Freedom 's Journey: African-American Voices of the Civil War, edited by Donald Yacovone (568 pages, January 2004), presents 58 documents written between 1860 and 1910 by black Americans who describe their unique experi­ ences during the Civil War, as slaves, solthers, sail­ ors, or witnesses to momentous events. Only a few of the writers are relatively well known today, but all offer a perspective on the war and the broad issues of free­ dom an d hu m an rights that lie at the core of why it was fought. Included are Frederick Douglass’s 1863 call for volun­ teers to join the 54th Massachusetts regi­ ment (“Men of Color, to Arms!”); minister J. Stella Martin’s 1865 sermon on his experience in bondage (“Well, I am a negro, and I was not contented”); three of Sgt. George E. Stephens’s regular dispatches from the front to the New York Weekly Anglo-African; a slave narrative written in 1866 by Mattie J. Jack­ son; the reminiscences of Susie King Taylor, who served as laundress for the 1st South Carolina Volunteers (a Union regiment); and the wartime memoirs of the Rev. Elijah P. Mans, w ho joined the 12th U.S. Colored Heavy Artillery in Louis­ ville in 1864. $40.00. Lawrence Hill; distributed by the Independent Publishers Group. ISBN 1- 55652-511-7. PC Annoyances, by Steve Bass (176 pages, Oc­ tober 2003), offers numerous tips and tricks to fix aggravating computer glitches, slowdowns, and software defaults. Bass, a contribut­ ing editor to PC World, includes ch ap ters o n e- mail, Windows, Internet browsers, Microsoft Office, W in d o w s E x­ plorer, music and video, and hard- ware that are filled with such gems as “Protect your system from dumb installations,” “Spam zappers extraordi-naire,” and “Revealing Word codes. ” Many fixes can be down- lo ad ed from the p u b lish er’s Web site at w w w .o reilly .co m /p can n o y an ces/. $19.95. O ’Reilly. ISBN 0-596-00593-8. The Revolution of Peter the Great by James Cracraft (192 pages, November 2003), summarizes the comprehensive military, diplomatic, bureau­ cratic, and cultural reforms introduced by Peter the Great (1689—1725) and the resultant opposition to his “Europeanization” of the empire. A good place to start for students, who may turn to Cracraft’s more comprehensive volumes on the Petrine revo­ lution for more details. $25-95. Harvard Univer­ sity. ISBN 0-674-01196-1. A Right Worthy Grand Mission: Maggie Lena Walker and the Quest for Black Eco­ nomic Empowerment by Gertrude Woodruff Marlowe (286 pages, December 2003), documents the life of Maggie Lena Walker (1865-1934), the first black woman in America to charter a bank, which survives now as the Consolidated Bank and Trust Company in Richmond, Virginia. An ardent feminist, Walker fought for women’s suffrage and brought the Independent Order of St. Luke, a fraternal and cooperative insurance society, to prominence. One of the wealthiest and most in­ fluential African American women of the early 20th century, her home in Richmond has been designated a National Historic Landmark. The author, a Howard University social anthropolo­ gist, spent the last ten years of her life researching Walker's life and legacy. $36.95. Howard Univer­ sity. ISBN 0-88258-211-9. Science in the Enlightenment: An Encyclo­ pedia, by William E. Bums (353 pages, Novem­ ber 2003), offers a snapshot of Western scientific knowledge in the 18th and early 19th centuries, http://www.oreilly.com/pcannoyances/ 1 6 6 / C&RL News ■ M arch 2004 an era when chemistry, geology, astronomy, and biology underwent significant development. The book contains 192 biographical and topical en­ tries, covering scientists from d’Alembert to Wolff, theories, disciplines, and organizations. The index conveniently includes significant book and jour­ nal titles m entioned in the text. $85.00. ABC- CLIO. ISBN 1-57607-886-8. Sea Dragons: Predators of the Prehistoric Oceans, by Richard Ellis (313 pages, October 2003), should satisfy most people who have longed for an undergraduate-level overview of extinct marine reptiles. Equally as entertaining and well- written as Ellis’s other books on the sea, Sea Drag­ ons describes the likely physiology and habits of ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, pliosaurs, and mosasaurs that populated the Mesozoic seas 250 to 65 mil­ lion years ago. Fifty-one of the author’s distinc­ tive line drawings accompany the text. $29.95. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-1269-6. Dinosaur fans will be pleased to note there is a new supplement (726 pages, 3rd Supp.‚ January 2004) to Donald F. Glut’s Dinosaurs: The Encyclo­ pedia, last updated in early 2002. Glut continues to keep readers current with the latest scientific findings, ideas, studies, and such controversies as whether or not dinosaurs were warm-blooded (en dothermic) and the specific evolutionary path from dinosaurs to birds. $95.00. McFarland. ISBN 0- 7864- 1518-5. The Tango in the United States, by Carlos G. Groppa (239 pages, December 2003), charts a c e n tu ry o f A m erican in te re s t in th is Argentinean dance from its introduction and instant acceptance in New York dance halls in the winter of 1913-1914 to the nuevo tango of Astor Piazzolla in the 1980s and its increasing exposure in competitions, on the stage, and in the movies at the end of the millennium. Groppa describes the influence of the dance’s promi­ n en t p roponents—Irene and Vernon Castle, Rudolph Valentino, Carlos Gardel, and Xavier Cugat—as well as such lesser-known aficiona­ dos as Osvaldo Fresedo and Francisco Canaro. $39.95. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-1406-5. World War I, by H. P. Willmott (317 pages, Oc­ tober 2003), serves as a broad visual introduction to the Great War, in the grand DK style. In addition to the maps and illustrations of the paraphernalia of the time (posters, letters, weapons, and uniforms), the volume’s timelines are most helpful in straight­ ening out overlapping campaigns. $40.00. DK. ISBN 0-7894-9627-5. The Sto›y o f the West, edited by Robert M. Udey 020 pages, September 2003), is another successful DK-Smithsonian Institution collaboration, with a good amount of space devoted to pre-contact In­ dian cultures and the Spanish colonies as well as the 19th and 20th centuries. $40.00. DK. ISBN 0-7894-9660-7. ACRL to offer three preconferences in Orlando! Friday, June 24, 2004 Information Commons 101: Nuts and Bolts Planning During this full-day preconference, presenters will provide nuts and bolts instruction for early-stage Information Commons (IC) planners. Increase your understanding of IC planning, implementa­ tion, and assessment issues. Return to your insti­ tution with increased clarity of IC problems and possible solutions, as well as practical guidelines. Inform ation Literacy: Time for a Compre­ h en sive Plan Using a workbook created by the preconference presenters, be guided through the process of creat­ ing a comprehensive plan for information literacy. Learn how to identify essential elements in con­ structing a plan and discover how to apply those elements to build a successful long-term plan. Leave the session with an outline and draft information literacy plan for your home institution. Scholarly Communication 101 Receive an introduction to the scholarly com­ munication landscape from ACRL members who are experts on scholarly communication issues. Become fluent with scholarly communication is­ sues and trends, and position yourself to partici­ pate in campus communication programs and other advocacy efforts. Preconference topics in­ clude the developing crisis in the system of schol­ arly communication and strategies for change. Register now for these events! Complete de­ tails and registration materials are online at www.ala.org/acrl/events. http://www.ala.org/acrl/events