Posted by
laurajane on Jul 11, 2012 in
Uncategorized |
Comments Off on 16 reference works you never knew existed
by Laura Hale Brockway
Being a science and medical writer at my day job, I often end up spending more time researching an article than I do writing it. And after 14 years, I’ve come to relish the research phase. When else can I so freely indulge my inner knowledge hound?
One of the greatest joys of researching is discovering unusual and obscure reference works. If you look hard enough, you’ll find a wealth of information about even the most obscure topic. Here are some of my favorites:
- Benet’s Reader’s Encyclopedia — referred to as “the supreme reference on world literature,” this encyclopedia contains 10,000 entries on everything from author biographies to plot synopses.
- TV Sets: Fantasy Blueprints of Classic TV Homes — features “extrapolated” blueprints from shows such as The Brady Bunch to the Adams Family. “Incredibly, all the plans are drawn to be architecturally feasible; that is, one could actually build from them.”
- The Order of Things: Hierarchies, Structures, and Pecking Orders — explains the orders and classifications in science, religion, history, business, the arts, sports, technology, mathematics, society, and domestic life.
- Dictionary of Symbols — a dictionary of 2,500 graphic symbols including each sign’s history, meaning, and classification system.
- Shakespeare’s Bawdy — a discussion of sexual and non-sexual expressions and allusions in the works of William Shakespeare. This reference book “puts the nudge and wink back in Shakespeare.”
Readers . . . any unusual reference books you’d like to share?
This article was first published on Ragan Communication’s PR Daily.