ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries Ja n u a r y 1 9 9 5 / 3 5 N ew Publications G eorge M. Eberhart A ltern ativ e M edicine: The Definitive Guide, com­ piled by the Burton Gold­ berg Group (1,068 pages, July 1994), is a reasonably thorough summary of nearly every Western and Eastern system of treatment outside o f conventional medicine. Goldberg, an American busi­ nessm an, m arshalled the writers and consultants who contributed to this volume. He cautions that although many o f these techniques are helpful for such com m on ailm ents as asthma, gastrointestinal disorders, headaches, and sinusitis (and may even prove useful in treating cancer, heart disease, or arthritis), they are no substitute for the advice and care of a physician or other licensed health professional. Part One is an essay on the causes of disease and the politics o f health care. Part Two ex­ plains how alternative therapies work, from acupuncture to yoga, and how to self-adminis ter them or locate a qualified practitioner. Part Three reviews more than 175 health conditions and the best self-care and professional treat­ ments that deal with them. $59.95. Future Medi­ cine Publishing, Inc., 10124 18th St. Ct. East, Puyallup, WA 98371. ISBN 0-9636334-3-0. The Basque Language, by Alan R. King (462 pages, August 1994), is the first practical intro­ duction to Basque for English-speaking audi­ ences. In addition to 40 carefully prepared, les son-like units, the text offers a comprehensive reference grammar section and an elementary reader with selections on Basque geography, language, folklore, modem literature, and news­ paper excerpts. The book also includes English- Basque and Basque-English vocabulary lists and three indexes that cover grammatical concepts, Basque affixes, and English phrases. $60.00. University of Nevada Press, Reno, NV 89557- 0076. ISBN 0-87417-155-5. The Beinecke Lesser Antilles Collection at H am ilton College: A Catalogue o f Books, M anuscripts, P rin ts, Maps, and Drawings, 1521—1 8 6 0 , prepared by Samuel J. Hough and Penelope R. O. Hough (414 pages, October 1994), provides extensive descriptions of 2,000 books and manuscripts that Walter Beinecke Jr. collected over several decades and do­ nated to Hamilton College in Clinton, New York. A 68- page index enhances access. $150.00. University Press of Florida, 15 N.W. 15th St., Gainesville, FL 32611-2079. ISBN 0-8130-1292-9. Biographical Dictionary o f N orth A m erican Classi c ists, edited by Ward W. Briggs Jr. (800 pages, Sep­ tember 1994), contains 600 profiles o f scholars who significantly influenced the course o f Clas­ sical studies in the United States and Canada. In addition to vital statistics and publication lists, individual contributors have written a paragraph or two about each classicist’s career. $115.00. Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881-5007. ISBN 0-313-24560-6. Cultural Crusaders: W om en Librarians in th e A m erican W est, 1 9 0 0 –1 9 1 7 , by Joanne E. Passet (248 pages, November 1994), docu­ ments the lives of several hundred women who participated in the development and diffusion o f the library in the American West in the first two decades o f the 20th century. The author focuses on women librarians in the eleven states west of the 100th meridian: their education, their impressions of the West, their changing per­ sonal and professional aspirations, their family relationships, and their advancement of librari anship on the frontier. A final chapter presents brief biographies of four representative women who embodied the spirit of these cultural cru­ saders. With 36 historical photos. $40.00. Uni­ versity o f New Mexico Press, 1720 Lomas Blvd. N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87131-1591. ISBN 0- 8263-1530-5. Early American Cinema, by Anthony Slide (263 pages, rev. ed., 1994), is a concise history o f the American movie industry before 1920. Topics include early independent filmmaking, the birth of the feature film, the star system, the role o f women in film, and new technologies. Completely revised since the first edition of 1970. $39.50. Scarecrow Press, 52 Liberty St., Metuchen, NJ 08840. ISBN 0-8108-2711-5. 3 6 /C&RL News Herbs, by Lesley Bremness (304 pages, 1994), In Hitler's S hadow , by Yaron Svoray and Nick Taylor (275 pages, October 1994), is the story o f Svoray, an Israeli Jew, infiltrating the German neo-Nazi underground, a network of skinheads and Old Guard that is perhaps more widespread and dangerous than Americans re­ alize. In the course o f his investigation he came across evidence of paramilitary training camps that sent neo-Nazi soldiers to support Croatian soldiers in the former Yugoslavia. The silence o f the German media and the federal govern­ ment on this movement, at least prior to Svoray’s revelations, is eerie. Merely a creepy minority, you say? So were the National Socialists in 1923 at the time o f the Putsch. $24.95. Doubleday, 1540 Broadway, New York, NY 10036. ISBN 0- 385-47284-6. Libraries and Librarianship in K orea, by Pongsoon Lee and Young Ai Um (172 pages, September 1994), reviews the development of national, academic, public, special, and school libraries in South Korea since the 1950s. $55.00. Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881. ISBN 0-313-28743-0. M anagem ent and Organization of the Acquisitions D epartm ent, edited by Twyla Racz and Rosina Tammany (131 pages, Novem­ ber 1994), addresses some timely topics in ac­ quisitions work: budget cuts as a catalyst for change, staffing, copy cataloging in acquisitions, nonperiodical continuations, and e-journals. Published simultaneously as no. 12 of The A c­ qu isition s L ib rarian . $24.95. Haworth Press, 10 Alice St., Binghamton, NY 13904. ISBN 1-56024- 583-2. Records M anagem ent Handbook, by Ira A. Penn, Gail Pennix, and Jim Coulson (303 pages, 2d ed., Septem ber 1994), presents proven management strategies for developing, implementing, and operating a records man­ agement program. Topics include management analysis, records appraisal, forms and directives, records disposition, and the highs and lows of using technology. $64.95. Gower; distributed by Ashgate Publishing Co., Old Post Road, Brookfield, VT 05036. ISBN 0-566-07510-5. The Refiner's Fire: The Making of Mor m o n C o sm o lo g y , 1 6 4 4 —1 8 4 4 , by Jo h n L. Brooke (421 pages, September 1994), docu­ ments the similarities between the early doc­ trines of Mormonism in the 1830s (the coequal­ is a visual guide to more than 700 herb species worldwide with a summary o f each plant’s uses in medicine, cookery, perfumery, and home­ opathy. The photography is impressive, show­ ing whatever parts are essential (roots, stems, flowers, fruit) as well as a view o f the full tree, shrub, plant, or vine. The scholarship is im­ peccable. For example, how many people know this: the root bark oil of sassafras (safrole), once used in root beer but now “banned in the USA, is only one-fourteenth as carcinogenic as the ethanol in ordinary beer.” This volume is one in a series of “Eyewitness Handbooks” that are essential for natural history collections. Others include rocks and minerals, butterflies and moths, trees, fossils, cats, dogs, horses, birds of the world, aquarium fish, and birds’ eggs. The herb volum e is $29.95 hardback. Dorling Kindersley Publishing, Inc., 232 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10016. ISBN 1-56458-497-6. A good supplement to this volume is Herbs of Choice: The Therapeutic Use of Phyto- medicinals, by Varro E. Tyler (209 pages, O c­ tober 1994), which attempts to separate fact from folklore in the medicinal properties of herbs. $24.95 hardback. Haworth Press, 10 Al­ ice Street, Binghamton, NY 13904. ISBN 1- 56024-894-7. Encyclopedia of American Indian Cos­ tum e, by Josephine Paterek (516 pages, May 1994), summarizes what is known about the dress, hairstyles, armor, body paint, tattoos, and masks o f Native American and Inuit tribal groups. Supplemented with photographs and drawings, this com prehensive work distin­ guishes the Chinook from the Chippewa. $75.00. ABC-CLIO, Inc., P.O. Box 1911, Santa Barbara, CA 93116-1911. ISBN 0-87436-685-2. Clarification In the ACRL Annual Report in the No­ vember issue of C&RL News, the program “Beyond the FI Key: Thinking and Teach­ ing the Internet within the Curriculum” was mistakenly listed as having been solely sponsored by the Bibliographic Instruction Section. The College Libraries Section co­ sponsored the program. The editors regret the error. Ja n u a ry 1 9 9 5 / 3 7 ity of matter and spirit, the covenant of celes­ tial marriage, the goal o f human godhood) with European hermetic and alchemical traditions drawn from the ancient world and fused with Christianity in the Renaissance. After Joseph Smith’s death in 1844, Mormonism moved away from its occult origins and towards a more tra­ ditional Protestant Christianity. An insightful contribution to the controversy surrounding the origins of Mormonism. $34.95. Cambridge Uni­ versity Press, 40 W. 20th St., New York, NY 10011-4211. ISBN 0-521-34545-6. Scholars' Guide to W ashington, D.C., fo r Russian, C entral Eurasian , an d Baltic Studies, by Steven A. Grant and William E. Pomeranz (293 pages, 3rd ed., October 1994), surveys 750 collections, organizations, and agencies devoted to the regions of the former Soviet Union. Information in each section var­ ies according to the type o f organization or agency. There are indexes to personal papers, library subject strength, subjects, and organiza­ tions. $60.00 hardcover. Johns Hopkins Uni­ versity Press, 2715 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21218-4319. ISBN 0-943875-51-X. The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of th e Undead, b y j . Gordon Melton (852 pages, October 1994). If you only have one vampire book in your reference collection, this should be it. Scholarly, comprehensive, and entertain­ ing, this volume examines vampire lore from the early Middle Ages to Anne Rice. Melton, a renowned expert on cults and comparative re­ ligion, is equally at home in this commentary on horror, which ranges from Vlad the Impaler and vampirism in film and fiction to blood fe tishes and the postmodern gothic subculture. Entries on garlic, sunlight, hypnotic powers, bats, fire, fingernails, the crucifix, spiders, and stakes will have you mesmerized. Even Count Chocula comes under consideration. With the most comprehensive listing of vampire films, plays, novels, organizations, and periodicals in existence, this book will bite your budget for a mere $16.95. Visible Ink Press, 835 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit, MI 48226-4094. ISBN 0-8103- 2295-1. W arblers of the Americas: An Identifi catio n Guide, by Jo n Curson, David Quinn, and David Beadle (252 pages, August 1994), is the first comprehensive guide to all 116 spe­ cies of wood warblers (subfamily Parulinae) in the Western Hemisphere; 36 full-color plates depict all the plumage variations. The text gives each warbler’s identifying features, geographi­ cal variations, calls, habitat and habits, breed­ ing, status and distribution, skull, movements, moult, and measurements. This is an essential book for taxonomy collections and a fun one for warbler watchers, especially those who ven­ ture to the Caribbean and other places where lesser-known species flourish. $40.00. Hough­ ton Mifflin Co., 215 Park Ave. South, New York, NY 10003. ISBN 0-395-70998-9. The W o m e n ’ s C h ro n o lo g y , by Jam es Trager (787 pages, September 1994), comple­ ments the author’s massive The P e o p le ’s C hro­ nology (recently updated through 1993 as a trade paperback) by highlighting the achieve­ ments, travails, trials, discoveries, and talents of women from prehistory to 1993. This is an­ other mindboggling Träger reference triumph that brings history to life. Events are identified by symbols for political events, human rights, exploration, science, music, theater, food and drink, the environment, and many other top­ ics. A very useful index and illustrations en­ hance the value o f this indispensable work. $19.95. Henry Holt Reference Books, 115 W. 18th St., New York, NY 10011. ISBN 0-8050- 3134-0. 3 8 /C&RL News