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The Oxford Companion to British History |
List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $19.77 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: The best one volume source on British History. Review: I have been using the "Oxford Companion to British History" on a regular basis since its publication. I am not a specialist in British History, but my work as a cataloguer of rare and antiquarian British books has required me to have a working knowledge of British History. This book has proved invaluable to me in my work. Moreover, I can rarely resist the temptation to browse the Companion--it is a text that draws the reader in. Highly recommended.
Rating:  Summary: Adopts a pretty big definition of 'British' Review: Nice little pieces on the areas Britain has affected but now leaves alone - nearly 4 pages on Australia, 1 each on Canada and New Zealand. Also helpful to find those weird, typically British obsessions: pigeon-fancying, seaside holidays and Tractarianism (go look them up). The kind of book you go to to look up one topic and find yourself reading for an hour. Failed to score 5 stars because it failed to record biographies on influential British sportsmen.
Rating:  Summary: For any academic library's British History collection Review: Now in a newly revised and expanded edition, The Oxford Companion To British History is a dictionary-style, 1056-page resource reference which is filled from cover to cover with names, places, terms, and events comprising the history of Great Britain and organized alphabetically for easy lookup. Compiled and edited by John Cannon (formerly the Chair of Modern History at Newcastle-upon-Tyne until 1992) and brimming with extensive facts and details, The Oxford Companion To British History is a top-notch reference which is enhanced with the inclusion of 12 maps, and would prove to be an invaluable cornerstone for any academic library's British History collection.
Rating:  Summary: Fascinating! Review: The Oxford Companion to British History by John Ashton Cannon(Editor) is brilliant in its outlay and is a must for anyone remotely interested in British history. For instance, who is John Gerard and what did he do to warrant a place in The Oxford Companion to British History by John Ashton Cannon(Editor) . The book is cataloged alphabetically and this makes it very easy to use; It would have been a nightmare if the person in charge had divided it into time periods since only die hard fans or connesaurs of British history would know all the time periods The maps in the end of book are very clear and royal lineage is very well presented. The book also has a well developed index that can easily be used even by a novice. The font in book chosen in the book is very pleasing to the eye and makes the book a pleasure to read/use as tool in realm of British History.
Rating:  Summary: A Fantastic Reference Work Review: This massive 1,000+ page guide to all things British is a solemn, sometimes irreverent dissection of the United Kingdom. More than just a reference work describing the doings of politicians and generals. This companion carefully moves into areas not normally covered by such works. There are entries that discuss various major industries - shipbuilding, mining, gas and cotton - and on aspects of private and domestic life, like childbirth, housing, health and food. While the growth, meaning and importance of sports is discussed, only two athletes rate their own entries (the soccer star Stanley Matthews, knighted for his accomplishments on the field, and cricketer W.G. Grace, the Victorian star who continued playing first-rate cricket until he was 60). The only flaw in the entire book is a production problem that caused the deletion of pages 949 through 980, or between James Ussher and William Whewell. Not a noticeable problem, unless you're looking up information about Queen Victoria.
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