College and Research Libraries


Book Reviews 
Anthony M. Cummings and others. 

University Libraries and Scholarly Com-
munication: A Study Prepared for the An-
drew W. Mellon Foundation. Washington, 
D.C.: Association of Research Librar-
ies, 1992. 205p. $8 (ISBN 9-918006-22-
8). LC 92-44941. 
This timely report on the present sta-

tus of scholarly communication is a joint 
effort of the Mellon Foundation, which 
has demonstrated considerable interest 
in academic libraries for at least the past 
five years, and the Association of Re-
search Libraries (ARL). The report is 
timely because, as any reader of this 
journal knows well, scholarly com-
munication is now poised on the thresh-
old of a new era. As a comprehensive yet 
succinct statement of the conditions sur-
rounding scholarly communication and 
the evolving role of the academic re-
search.library, the Mellon study offers a 
welcome opportunity to take stock, re-
flect, and place very rapidly moving 
developments in a useful perspective. 

The stated purpose of the book is to 
"describe the library landscape as it ap-
pears today, in its collecting, operating, 
financial, and electronic dimensions." 
The report addresses concepts such as 
those aptly labeled "ownership versus 
access" and "just in time versus just in 
case," and gives much space to publish-
ing industry production and costs 
during the past few years. Clearly in-
tended not for librarians, but rather for 
other parties with a stake in scholarly 
communication, it is nevertheless im-
portant for those of us within the profes-
sion to note the perception expressed by 
those outside the profession that "[t]he 
opportunity exists to rethink an entire 
set of relationships that, if reconstituted 
appropriately, can give libraries both 
new dimensions and an even more cen-

tral role in the educational process than 
they have enjoyed in the past." 

The report is divided into two distinct 
parts, each with several chapters. The 
first, "Historical Trends: Collections, Ex-
penditures, Publications," is illustrated 
with forty-one charts and graphs and 
nineteen tables. The second part, entitled 
"Information Needs and New Technolo-
gies," synthesizes models of scholarly 
communication and describes their 
principal elements. The authors do a 
clear, thorough, and thoughtful job here, 
also acknowledging that changes are 
coming about so rapidly that this mate-
rial is likely to date quickly. They are 
correct to offer this caveat, of course, but 
this section is a fine contribution toward 
the clarification of a set of situations that 
is unusually complex. 

Documentation is heavy throughout 
the book, with much reliance on the cur-
rent literature and on the files of the 
ARL. Data about libraries are taken from 
twenty-four ARL member institutions, 
half public, half private. It is the second 
part of this study that will be of particu-
lar interest to academic librarians be-
cause of its perceptive synthesis of 
trends, issues, and opportunities related 
to information technology, and also be-
cause of the tentative conclusions prof-
fered in answer to questions fundamental 
to the future of scholarly communication. 
The report is sometimes bold in that re-
gard. For example, it is a premise of the 
second section "that printed scholarly 
literature will continue to exist for a long 
time and that adequate bibliographic 
control is essential to scholarship." 
Another informed assumption is that 
peer review will continue to be central to 
the scholarly process, but that it may be 
expedited and expanded. Readers of this 
journal will be gratified to know that the 

357 



358 College & Research Libraries 

book's authors are highly sensitive to the 
use of the word information throughout 
the text. Not surprisingly, the foundation 
has praise and great expectations for the 
value of the RLG Conspectus for the 
sharing of resources nationally; the 
foundation also considers the recent ef-
forts of the Colorado Alliance of Re-
search Libraries as a useful prototype for 
cooperation. 

So, what, in the final analysis, will be 
the model for scholarly communication 
in the future? The authors word the an-
swer to this question with such great 
care that it is worth citing verbatim: "It 
is extremely unlikely-we would say al-
most inconceivable-that any alterna-
tive model will completely supplant the 
existing one at any point in the foresee-
able future. Rather, we envision a situa-
tion where incremental modifications to 
the current model will be made. We 
would also argue, however, that it ·is 
equally inconceivable that there will not 
eventually be a more-or-less complete 
transformation of scholarly communica-
tion." We were right all along. 

This excellent study is accompanied by 
more than the usual scholarly apparatus, 
with foreword, introduction, bibliogra-
phy, three appendixes, a glossary, and 
even a fifteen-page synopsis, con-
tributed by Ann Okerson, director of the 
ARL Office of Scientific and Academic 
Publishing. Unfortunately, it has no 
index. It is quite evident that the Mellon 
Foundation has a genuine desire to help 
the scholarly communication system 
grow stronger, healthier, more effective. 
It has distributed many copies of its 
study to university presidents, academic 
vice presidents, and library directors 
free of charge and is making other copies 
available for wide distribution at nomi-
nal cost. The foundation sees that the 
future of scholarly communication is not 
a library issue, but an institutional issue; 
that it is not just an institutional issue, 
but a national issue. The Mellon Founda-
tion has done much to advance scholarly 
communication and the cause of aca-
demic libraries by producing and dis-
seminating this study.-Charles B. 
Osburn, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa. 

July1993 

Glazier, Loss Pequeno. Small Press: An 
Annotated Guide. Westport, Conn.: 
Greenwood, 1992. 123p. $49.95 (ISBN 
0-313-28310-9). LC 92-15482. 
Bibliographies are not usually recom-

mended as entertainment. But then can 
there be any more charming annotator 
than Loss Glazier? As incisive and infor-
mative as one might wish, he never re-
sists an opportunity to gloss, adding a bit 
of background or a reference, a passing 
opinion or an illuminating quote. The 
result is that this shortish list (174 items) 
may well be the elegy of the Mimeo Rev-
olution, that Indian summer of literary 
Modernism. Glazier likes his subject too 
well ever to be dry, and has shown clev-
erness at a postmodern way of writing 
history. Self-confident, limited, not total-
izing, not transcendental, thoroughly 
entertaining. 

This is not a comprehensive book. It is 
restricted to the period since 1960, and to 
American materials only. It concerns it-
self not with single authors or presses, 
nor regional publishing, nor reviews, 
how-to-books, vanity or subsidy publish-
ing, or fine presses. It is strictly literary-a 
significant limitation-and includes cur-
rent information, coresources, and sup-
plementary materials (catalogs, lists, 
bibliographies). The standard histories and 
other sources covering the period up to 
1960 are concisely dealt with in the preface. 
While I can't think of anything missing, 
Glazier's purpose is not to be the last 
word, and he has not dug out obscure 
material (except for one master's thesis, 
and some letters to editors). Though not 
exhaustive, this is a well-done list. Its 
glory is all in the annotations. 

Glazier begins with an introduction 
mostly devoted to characterizing the 
small press, where we learn that the 
"mimeo revolution" was actually made 
more on offset presses. I suspect Glazier 
would like to believe that the "spirit of 
mimeography, that of the small pub-
lisher, has produced an important leg-
acy; it enters the nineties not only with a 
proven record of the production of liter-
ary texts but with an increasingly visible 
presence in the publishing industry." 
Yet, as with the term hacker, there has