An
Intelligent Guide to Intelligent Research
The
Oxford Guide to Library Research
Thomas Mann
Oxford University Press
1998, 316pp, ISBN 0-19-512313-1, $23.95
Reviewed
by Ulli
Diemer
Although the
Oxford Guide to Library Research contains much detailed
advice about where to find information, it far more than a how-to
book. What Thomas Mann has written is a first-rate guide to
how to think about research and how to formulate strategies
for answering research questions.
Mann draws on
his experience as a reference librarian at the Library of Congress,
as an academic and freelance researcher, and as a private detective,
to identify patterns in research behaviour, patterns in the
types of questions that are asked, in the unconscious assumptions
that are made about what can be done and what is available,
patterns in bad advice researchers receive, and patterns in
the mistakes and omissions that researchers make that reduce
the efficiency of their research.
He stresses
the importance of being versatile and systematic in pursing
research questions, of making sure that you have considered
all the possible avenues. He considers the strengths and weaknesses
of both "real" and "virtual" libraries,
and while he is clear about the value of the Internet for doing
research, he is nonetheless at pains to debunk the notion that
everything can now be found online. Not only is "everything"
not available online, but it never will be. He points out that
the Library of Congress alone has some 20 million volumes on
its shelves, with more than 1,000 being added every working
day, and that virtually none of this collection is available
electronically or ever will be.
The Guide's
primary focus is research methods, with nine different methods
being considered. Each method: controlled vocabulary searching,
keyword searching, citation searching, searching through published
bibliographies, Boolean combination searching, using the subject
expertise of people sources, browsing and scanning subject-classified
bookstacks, related-record searching, and types of literature
searching, is considered at length, with attention paid to pitfalls
to avoid as well as what strategies are likely to be successful.
Each chapter is clear, informative, and full of wisdom.
This is far
from being a dry tome about academic drudgery: Mann combines
common sense and a dry wit to make this an enjoyable book to
read or to dip into at random. Where else would one learn what
Neils Horrebow's Natural History of Iceland has to say in its
entry "Concerning Owls", which reads, in full, "There
are no owls of any kind in the whole island" or find the
introduction to Mrs. Byrne's Dictionary of Unusual, Obscure,
and Preposterous Words (new and expanded edition), by Mrs. Byrne's
ex-husband: "Working alone and without government support
(or even comprehension) she managed to assemble the six thousand
weirdest words in the English language. Nobody asked her to
do it because nobody thought such a thing was possible. In fact,
I asked her not to do it."
As bibliophiles
are glad that Mrs. Byrne completed her self-assigned task, so
researchers can be glad that Thomas Mann completed his.
Published Summer
2000 in Sources,
the directory for journalists and researchers. Available from
Sources, 489 College St., #305, Toronto M6G 1A6 Canada - Phone:
416-964-7799 - www.sources.com