Thoroughly revised, updated, and expanded to include the newest 1998 revision of the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, Second Edition, the latest Dewey Decimal System Classification, 21st Edition, and the most recent editions of Library of Congress Classification schedules and Library of Congress Subject Headings, Manheimer's Cataloging and Classification, Fourth Edition, Revised and Expanded explains and demonstrates cataloging and classification principles, standards, and practices by:
You know you're a librarian when... you have a book on how to catalog in your library. This was the textbook for my graduate level cataloging class. It is a scintillating look at how to catalog many things in life. [return][return]My professor was in fact Dr. Saye, the author, and that still didn’t make the class much fun. [return][return]That is why Library Thing is such a boon. It harvests the MARC for you saving everyone the trouble of learning the boring nature of cataloging. WooHoo Z39.50.[return][return]The textbook is dry and at times not very useful. It reads, well it doesn’t read because it is more instructional with visual examples. Use at your own risk.
The enclosed CD is significantly more helpful than the book since it shows the cover pages that the bibliographic information is being gleaned from. The book is just hundreds of pages of one-sentence, not elaborated on rules.
That said, I'm not sure how you would go about making AACR and MARC formatting interesting...
This is a great book for learning cataloging because it has tons of examples. There is some text but it is often outdated and not that useful. The book is mostly examples, which helped me immensely in my cataloging course this term.