College and Research Libraries plus harder work on the part of the authors would have produced a much more valu­ able book.-Thomas L. Bonn, Electronic Media Center Librarian, State University of N ew York, College at Cortland. Robinson, Arthur H., and Petchenik, Bar­ bara Bartz. The Nature of Maps: Essays toward Understanding Maps and Map­ ping. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Pr., 1976. 138p. $8.95. LC 75-36401. ISBN 0-226-72281-3. The Nature of Maps consists of six essays which together are an impressive attempt to provide a general theory of cartography. The essays are: On Maps and Mapping; the Map as a Communication System; Map­ ping, Language and Meaning; Seeing and Mapping; the Conception of Space; and Structure in Maps and Mapping. Drs. Rob­ inson and Petchenik are eminent cartogra­ phers, well versed in the literature of their own field as well as related disciplines such as logic, philosophy, linguistics, informa­ tion theory, and psychology. Generally, cartographers have been pri­ marily concerned with various technical in­ novations and not the theoretical problem of how a map acquires meaning from its maker and elicits meaning rin its user. In order to understand the communicative process in maps, the authors provide an analysis of other types of communications and demonstrate their relationship to car­ tography. What the authors are delineating is a broad research paradigm specific to this discipline, with the emphasis shifting from the "map as a static graphic display to the cognitive and perceptual activities of the individuals who interact with maps." This is the first detailed analysis of the philosophical basis of cartography and the treatment of the map as a cognitive system. It is a highly sophisticated benchmark work which treats in great detail issues which have been only briefly raised by earlier re­ searchers: for example, the fundamental character of meaning in the mapping sys­ tem, physiological and psychological in­ sights into visual cognition, development of the ability to visualize and form images of the perceptual ·stimuli themselves, and acquisition and character of spatial knowl­ edge. The volume is well documented with nu­ merous references to scholars in the sci- Recent Publications I 171 ences and humanities, such as R. Camap, E. Cassirer, J. Piaget, M. Polyani, and E. Imhof. It should be noted that this is far from the easiest book to follow) for either the cartographer or the librarian. It is a major contribution toward a general the­ ory of cartography and clearly demonstrates that the "concept of spatial relatedness which is of concern in mapping and which indeed is the reason for the very existence of cartography, is a quality without which it is difficult or impossible for the human mind to apprehend anything." The Nature of Maps is recommended for most four­ year college and university libraries.-Alan Edward Schorr, Assistant Professor, Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. A Reader in Library Management. Edited by Ross Shimmon, and with linking com­ mentaries by John Allred, K. H. Jones, Peter Jordan. London: Clive Bingley; Hamden, Conn.: Linnet Books, 1976. $10.00. 213p. LC 76-10382. ISBN 0­ 85157-194-8, Bingley; 0-208-01378-4, Linnet. The purpose of this reader "is to present, in an accessible and convenient form, a group of articles which have been found to be of more than average usefulness by sev­ eral lecturers with courses in library man­ agement." The twelve articles chosen are from British, American, and Canadian jour­ nals, dated between 1968 and 1974. The text itself is divided into five sec­ tions: management, planning, organization, personnel, and evaluation. The articles chosen to discuss issues relating to these five topics provide a general introduction to library management theory. "The Need for Adminish·ative Know-How in Libraries" by Beatrice V. Simon is well-placed as the initial selection and provides a synoptic re­ view of the literature and concepts of man­ agement science. In "Creative Library Management" K. H. Jones distinguishes between the narrowness of mechanistic librarianship and a more en­ compassing existential view of library ser­ vice. P. H. Sewell and J. R. Haak point up the need for library goals on a national level and in undergraduate libraries, re­ spectively. ..A Systems Concept of Organization and Control of Large University Libraries" by ~72 j College & Research Libraries • March 1977 G. C. Burgis presents a "team approach to library administration." A matrix interrelat­ ing public and technical services personnel produces teams to provide administrative alternatives to management problems. . Maslow's hierarchy of needs and Herz­ berg's hygiene and motivation factors form the basis for the two articles on personnel. B. G. Dutton's "Staff Management and Staff Participation" gives ~m overview of theories of organizational structure. K. H. Plate and E. W. Stone replicate Herzberg's theorem with library personnel in "Factors Affecting Libraries Job Satisfaction." Standards for library evaluation are found in "Review of Criteria Used to Mea­ sure Lipracy Effectiveness" by E. Evans, H. Borko, and P. Ferguson. This is a review article on the literature of library standards; an extensive list of fifty-five references is in­ cluded. A Reader in . Library Management suc­ ceeds in fulfilling its purpose, presenting seminal articles on library management in a volume of reasonable length. The empha­ sis throughout is on management tech­ niques and theory as applicable to libraries. Because the articles are theoretic, this text would appear to be most meaningful to practicing administrators or to students in conjunction with case studies. · There are a few shortcomings in the for­ mat of this reader. Typographical errors in the text and on at least one matrix may cause some confusion. Were the credentials of the contributor located at the beginning of each article, the reader might have had more appreciation for the writer's point of view: This anthology is recommended to li­ braries collecting comprehensively in li­ brary administration.-Ralph D.. Arcari, Acting Director of Libraries, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington. Taubert, Sigfred, ed., The Book Trade of the World; Volume II, The Americas, Australia, New Zealand. New York, Bowker, 1976. 377p. $36.00. LC 72­ 142165. ISBN 3-578-04567-5. Part one of this valuable set (slated for completion in three volumes) appeared in 1972 and covered Europe and international agencies. Although it received considerable notice in library and book magazines, it was not evaluated in this journal. For those in­ terested in an appraisal, probably the most thorough review of the first volume was that by David Kaser (Library Journal 97: 3556 (Nov. 1, 1972)). The format established in the earlier vol­ ume continues in the second. Local experts, for the most part, were asked to submit data for their countries under thirty-five headings: among these are country infor­ mation, ·past and present, trade press, mar­ ket research; book production, publishing, bibliophily · (I like that word!), and book exports. If there was nothing to report un­ der one of the individual headings, it was deleted. There are forty-four articles about separate countries and dependencies, as well as overall surveys of Latin America, the British West Indies, and the West In­ dies Associated States. Twenty-two indi­ vidual writers contributed the articles. The length of each varies from twenty-eight pages for the U.S. to three for Surinam. This set ·is infused with a sense of pur­ pose. "Never before," editor Taubert as­ serts, "have all branches of the book trade had so great or promising a mission in unit­ ing the nations as they have today.... Publishing and trading in books is an act of bridge building between authors and readers, country and country, continent ·and continent." Taubert is, of course, uniquely qualified for this undertaking. He is the former director of the famed Frankfort Book Fair and a respected figure in the in­ ternational book trade. He is widely known here for his magnificent Bibliopola (Bow­ ker, 1966, 2v.), the first "iconography" of the book trade. BTW II is no mere directory or compen­ dium of statistics. It contains substantial narrative material. I found the histori~al portions in the "Past & Present" sections particularly informative. The bibliographies for each country and topic point the con­ cerned reader to further sources of infor­ mation. Just as others have noted of the first volume, volume II also contains suc­ cinct information either not readily avail­ able elsewhere or not otherwise obtainable at all. Publication delays have regrettably ren­ dered a certain portion of the data obso- · lete. For example, book production and sales statistics are mostly old-1970 vin­ tage, and there are few bibliographical ci­