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| BIBLIO DETAILS | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Sherry Keith, "The Determinants of Textbook Content," in Philip G. Altbach, G.P. Kell, H.G. Petrie and L.W. Weis, editors. Textbooks in American Society: Politics, Policy and Pedagogy. State University of New York Press, 1991. Peter Kendrick and Enid L. Zafran, editors. Indexing Specialties: Law. Information Today, 2001. Kendrick and Zafran have compiled chapters that cover a broad range of challenges in legal indexing. They begin with practical advice for new legal indexers. One chapter addresses indexing statutory materials. R. Keyes. The Courage to Write. Henry Holt, 1995. Arthur Klebanoff. The Agent: Personalities, Publishing and Politics. Texere, 2002. Klebanoff, owner of the Scott Meredith agency, offers insights into the literary agent business in an anecdote-laden account of working with celebrity authors. Although the focus is on trade book, there are lessons too for academic authors. (jv) M.L. Kelper An Illustrated Handbook of Desktop Publishing and Typesetting, second edition. Tab Books, 1990. Alvin Kernan. The Death of Literature. Yale University Press, 1990. Daniel J. Kevles. "SciTech: The Forces Are With Us," Chronicle of Higher Education (August 1, 2003). Page B11-B12. Kevles, co-author of Inventing America: A History of the United States (Norton, 2002), argues that technology is an overlooked vehicle to reach today's students in many disciplines. Technology, he says, is at the heart of the Ameican experience. L.S. King. Why Not Sat It Clearly? A Guide to Expository Writing. Little, Brown, 1991. Ellen M. Kozak. Every Writer's Guide to Copyright and Publishing Law, second edition. Henry Holt, 1997. Kozak, an author and attorney, adds a chapter on electronic work to her compact, highly readable guide to U.S. copyright law as it relates to literary works. Kozak also has added a chapter on author collaboration agreements. (jv) Ellen M. Kozak. Every Writer's Guide to Copyright and Publishing Law, third edition New York: Henry Holt, 2004. Kozak, herself an author and lawyer, covers publishing contracts, libel, privacy, electronic property, moral rights, Son of Sam laws, and product liability in this clearly written update of her 1997 edition. J. Kremer. (1998). 1001 Ways to Market Your Books. Open Horizons, 1998. C.J. Kramsch. "The Cultural Discourse of Foreign Language Textbooks," in A.J. Singerman, editor, Toward a New Integration of Language and Culture, Pages 63-88. Northeast Conference, 1988. Analyzes the culture of the textbook in the context of education and publishing. Discusses the kind of culture contained in textbooks and suggests directions for the future. (lkh) Steven G. Krantz. A Primer of Mathematical Writing: Being a Disquisition on Having Your Ideas Recorded, Typeset, Published, Read, and Appreciated American Mathematical Society 1997. J. Krementz. The Writer's Desk. Random House, 1996. J. Kremer. 1001 Ways to Market Your Book. Ad-Lib Publications, 1990. June Kronholz. "Bibliography Mess: The Internet Wreaks Havoc With the Form," Wall Street Journal, Volume 239 (May 2, 2002), Number 86, Pages A1-A6. Kronholz, writing for a general audience, has fun with the variety of acdemic styles -- APA, Chciago, MLA, NISO, Council of Science Editors, NLM, plus the lawyers, the engineers, the musicians, and all the others. Kronholz's news angle is how these meisters of style are dealing with Internet citations. The answer is no surprise: Each in its own way and not very satisfactorily considering, she says, "the anarchies of cyberspace." (jv)
BIBLIO DETAILS | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | |
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