College and Research Libraries


148 I College & Research Libraries • March 1978 

indexed by author, title, and subject. Anno-
tations give purpose, arrangement, and use 
of the sources in women's studies research. 
The inclusion of subject indexing terms in 
various sources will be welcomed by refer-
ence librarians who try to explain to under-
graduates that one subject area is analyzed 
under various headings in various indexes. 

For women's studies, the Schlachter and 
Belli volume, within the carefully defined 
scope of its parameters, is a more compre-
hensive guide to sources solely about 
women and published by "mainstream" 
publishers. In contrast, McKee's bibliogra-
phy also is intended to be an introduction to 
reference sources from more traditional dis-
ciplines that are useful in women' s studies 
research. Researchers who eonsult general 
indexes will wish to consult McKee first. 

Items in the main section of McKee in-
clude the University of Connecticut's Alter-
native Press Collection's feminist reference 
books plus books and pamphlets from 
movement publishers on Third World wo-
men, socialist feminism, lesbianism, and 
other feminist issues. Alternative and/or 
small press and ephemeral material can be 
difficult to locate. McKee is worth purchas-
ing solely for these listings and for the ex-
cellent, annotated supplement on feminist 
serials in Connecticut's Alternative Press 
Collection by Joanne V. Akeroyd. The value 
of this slim volume as an acquisitions and 
reference aid far exceeds its price. Regret-
tably, this paperbound work is poorly 
bound, and reinforcement of its binding is 
advised.-Sherrie S. Bergman , College Li-
brarian, Wheaton College , Norton, Massa-
chusetts. 

Garfield, Eugene . Essays of an Information 
Scientist. With a foreword by Joshua 
Lederberg. Philadelphia: lSI Press. 1977. 
2v. (Volume 1, 1962-1973. Volume 2, 
1974-1976.) $25.00 (plus postage and 
handling , $1.00 in U . S., Canada, and 
Mexico; $5.00 other locations) . LC 77-
602. ISBN 0-89495-000-2. 
In my little-·desk dictionary, "essay" is 

defined as "an analytic or interpretative 
literary composition usually dealing with its 
subject from a limited or personal point of 
view." The lexicographer probably had in 
thought the essays of Lamb or Emerson or 

Thurber or E. B. White. The current work 
would be better with the title "Disquisitions 
by ... " or "Lucubrations of. ... " It is a 
heavy work, and "essay" is too light a word 
for the substance herein. The 398 pieces the 
author has chosen to call essays are, in real-
ity, one long essay drawn from Mr. 
Garfield's thoughts on scientific journals 
and, more particularly, citation indexing in 
and for periodical literature. 

Garfield, forrner president of ADI (now 
ASIS) and currently active in the Institute 
for Scientific Information (lSI), is also presi-
dent of his own publishing firm, Information 
International, Inc. (III), in Philadelphia. III 
is publisher of various editions of Current 
Contents, and the essays republished in this 
unfinished set are gathered from Current 
Contents' first fifteen years. While Garfield 
is the one man that could (and did) write so 
extensively on citation indexing in his own 
periodical, the question of an overabun-
dance of publicity must- be raised when he 
republishes, uncut, the entire set. Perhaps 
an audience (unknown to this reviewer) has 
an unsatisfied appetite to read and reread 
articles on citation indexing. 

It should not be inferred that the indi-
vidual pieces gathered here lack merit. In 
fact, they are good, impassioned, and terse; 
they sound like Garfield in person. Garfield 
promotes his products; Garfield announces 
his plans for editorial change ; Garfield eval-
uates his products for the information com-
munity; Garfield introduces his associates 
and vouches for their character and integ-
rity; Garfield acknowledges the adulation his 
publications have received among users. If 
one could read them for review as they 
were meant originally to be read (one at a 
time) with a fortnight between sessions, 
they would have a less dramatic effect than 
the collective impact of the whole lot taken 
at a single sitting or even within a week's 
time . 

Librarians, particularly post-master's stu-
dents of library science, information scien-
tists, and historians of science, will find in 
Garfield's two volumes a mine of primary 
importance. It is not the mother lode, but it 
is rich and has within it a vein of the pure 
metal-a vein to be probed and followed to 
the end. The author work was done as jour-
nal publication reached its height. 



McGraw-Hill Texts 
on Library Science: 

PRIMARY SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE 
INTRODUCTION TO REFERENCE WORK, 
Volume I: BASIC INFORMATION SOURCES, Third Edition 
William Katz State University of New York, Albany 

A thorough analysis of various information sources and how they are 
employed in reference work, this book discusses traditional forms -such 
as bibliographies, indexes, and encyclopedias -with a chapter devoted 
to each form. 
1978, 352 pages, $11.95 

INTRODUCTION TO REFERENCE WORK, Volume II: 
REFERENCE SERVICES AND REFERENCE PROCESSES, 
Third Edition 
William Katz State University of New York, Albany 

The second volume of this long-popular work analyzes advanced 
topics such as computerized reference searches, library networks, and 
how to conduct a reference interview. Part Ill: Reference Service and the 
Computer, is completely new. 
1978,288 pages, $10.95 

INTRODUCTION TO LIBRARIANSHIP, Second Edition 
Jean Key Gates University of South Florida . 

A complete, overview of the profession of librarianship, this book 
emphasizes major objectives, services, and trends of libraries; and introduces 
readers to the attitudes and principles of librarianship as a career. 
1976,288 pages, $11 .95 

GUIDE TO THE USE OF BOOKS AND LIBRARIES, 
Third Edition 
Jean Key Gates University of South Florida 

An analysis of what a library is and how to use it, this book em-
phasizes the academic library and covers the many kinds of library mate-
rial available, both book and non-book. 
1974,308 pages, $9.50 cloth, $6.50 paper 

LIBRARIES AND LIBRARIANSHIP IN THE WEST: 
A BRIEF HISTORY 
Sidney L. Jackson Kent State University 

This text covers the history.of libraries and librarianship as they relate 
to the development of lrte and thought in western civilization , with emphasis 
on topics of current interest. 
1974,489 pages, $18.50 •, ~ 

. . COLLEGE DIVISION ~J ~~ 
Pncessubjecttochange McGRAW-HILL BOOK COMPANY c;.• 

1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10020 l.ft II 



150 I College & Research Libraries • March 1978 

As there is a vein in the mine, there are 
dangers, too-the quicksand of diversion to 
topics not followed up; the poisonous gas of 
too much expansion on one theme; the 
chancy shoring of unselected timber using 
every scrap of "learned lumber" to form the 
shaft. 

There is also dross that must he proc-
essed afresh by each reader to obtain that 
which is precious. Garfield's dross is his in-
tense preoccupation with his corporate wel-
f.ue. It is never so labeled, but no label is 
needed. 

Garfield's price is high ($25. 00), but the 
price per "essay" is low ($.06285 each). The 
problem is ancient and insoluable. It is a 
raisin cake. To buy the raisins (desired), one 
must buy the cake as well (undesired). 

The work is recommended for purchase 
by library schools and for extensive collec-
tions on information science only.-Charles 
H. Stevens , Executive Director, Southeast-
ern Library Network (SOLINET), Atlanta, 
Georgia. 

Multitype Library Cooperation. Edited by 
Beth A. Hamilton and William B. Ernst, 
Jr. New York : Bowker, 1977. 216p. 
$19.95. LC 77-2492. ISBN 0-8352-0980-6. 
At the 1976 annual conference of the 

American Library Association, a program on 
"Opportunities in Multitype Library 
Cooperatives" appropriately had the multi-
sponsorship of units in ALA and the Special 
Libraries Association representing all types 
of libraries. The collection under review 
contains the revised and edited papers pre-
sented at that program plus additional ones 
solicited later. A.~ with most heterogeneous 
gatherings of this kind, the resulting cover-
age is rather spotty and tends, perhaps un-
avoidably, to skim the surface of the many-
faceted phenomenon of multitype library 
cooperation as it has developed in recent 
years. The collection does, however, offer to 
the librarian who has not been closely in-
volved with cooperative ..activities (other 
than traditional interlibrary loan) a capsule 
view of the experiences of several ,enterpris-
ing groups and to those who have been in-
volved some points of comparison. 

Preceded by three background articles 
and by four pieces unevenly exploring the 
federal , multistate , state, and local roles in 

multitype cooperation, the longest section 
contains eight "case studies" and five essays 
from "special perspectives." Among the 
cooperative efforts described in the case 
studies are seven that are intrastate-two in 
Indiana, one in Milwaukee, three in New 
York, and one in Cleveland-and one that is 
multistate, the Bibliographic Center for Re-
search, Rocky Mountain Region . The 
perspectives represent school, special, and 
academic libraries-large and small-and 
metropolitan library. councils . 

Although the emphasis on single-state and 
substate cooperatives may seem unbalanced, 
the case studies and the special perspec-
tives, in which other cases are cited, possi-
bly constitute the most valuable part of this 
book. Through accounts of the specific cir-
cumstances leading to the creation of formal 
organizations, the programs they have de-
veloped, and some of the problems they 
have encountered, other practitioners (even 
under radically different conditions) may he 
able not only to gain new ideas and insights 
but also to avoid the common pitfalls of 
cooperative efforts. 

In an overview of the planning, gover-
nance, and funding of multitype library 
cooperatives-one of the background 
chapters-Sylvia Faibisoff provides a helpful 
distillation of selected sources, including a 
detailed table showing legislative support in 
the various states. The picture she presents, 
however, is incomplete . Several inac-
curacies and omissions in her information 
relating to New England suggest that spe-
cific items should be double-checked before 
they are accepted as factual, and further re-
search should be done in a particular area if 
it is imp.ortant to learn the full situation 
there. For example, Faibisoff ignores the 
cooperative established in late 1972 by the 
six state library agencies of New England, 
with a multitype library advisory panel and 
a mission to serve all libraries in the region. 
She also refers to both the interstate organi-
zations included-the New England Library 
Information Network (NELINET) arid the 
Research Libraries Group (RLG)-by 
slightly variant names and omits one of the 
states covered by the former's services. 
Other apparent discrepancies, e.g. , in the 
references to the states that have appro-
priated funds for multitype cooperatives