The Chicago Manual
of Style The Essential Guide for Writers, Editors
& Publishers
by John Grossman
The new edition of the
classic reference for all who work with words.
Here is the thoroughly revised and
updated edition of the one essential reference for all who
work with words--writers, editors, proofreaders, indexers,
copywriters, designers, and publishers. Almost 200 pages longer
than its predecessor, this edition reflects nearly every significant
change in style, usage, procedure, and technology. It is easier
to use, richer in illustrative examples, and informed everywhere
by the presence of computers in publishing, from manuscript
preparation to editing, typesetting, indexing, design, and
printing.
The result of more than a decade's
worth of continuous editing and revision, the changes to this
edition fall into two broad categories.
First are the changes designed to make
editorial guidelines more systematic, more inclusive, more
reflective of contemporary usage, and more accessible. There
are major revisions in the chapter on quotations, which features
a fuller discussion of speech and alternative punctuation;
in the chapter on names and terms, expanded treatment of nationalities,
tribes, and races; a reorganized chapter on foreign languages,
with a new section on Hebrew; and a revised and enlarged tabular
spelling guide for compound words and words with prefixes
and suffixes.
The most thoroughly revised is the
section on documentation. What was scattered across three
chapters is now more logically and concisely presented in
two. Chapter 15 now covers the humanities style of documentation,
and chapter 16, the author-date style preferred in the natural
and social sciences. Notes and bibliographies are discussed
separately, and there are many examples of ways to cite a
range of material-- from medieval documents to computer programs,
with guidelines for citing data bases, network billboards,
and other electronic documents.
The other set of changes emphasizes
new developments in publishing, from new technologies for
composition, design, printing, and binding, to the shifting
responsibilities of author and editor in an age of personal
computers. For first-time and self-publishing authors, there
is also new information about the outside of the book: jackets,
covers, and how to obtain and display ISBN numbers and bar
codes. The chapter on copyrights and permissions has been
rewritten by attorney William Strong to cover current laws,
practices, and procedures, with a more substantial section
on interpreting the concept of "fair use." Finally,
the bibliography and glossary have been extensively revised.
This revision process has been guided
by a set of basic principles: consistency, clarity, literacy,
good sense, and good usage, all of them tempered by a respect
for the individuality of expression. These principles have
worked successfully at the Press for a century; constantly
renewed, they are what makes the Manual the authoritative
voice of publishing. There is no other reference so valued
or so necessary.
Features of the new edition
The first revision in eleven years--updated,
expanded, and reorganized to incorporate contemporary usage
and technology
Many more examples illustrate every
chapter
Documentation chapters completely rewritten
for greater ease of use
Discusses computer terminology through
every stage of the publishing process--from preparing a manuscript
to composition and printing
Extensively revised and updated chapter
on copyright and permissions
Significantly updated chapters on quotations,
names and terms, spelling, and indexing.