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Oxford Family Encyclopedia: The Ultimate Single-Volume Reference for Home, School and Office
 
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Oxford Family Encyclopedia: The Ultimate Single-Volume Reference for Home, School and Office [Hardcover]

Oxford University Press (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

019521367X 978-0195213676 October 23, 1997 1st
Your five-year-old daughter is watching a squirrel out the kitchen window and she asks you, "Is it true that some squirrels can fly? That they have wings?" (Problem: you'd like to show her a flying squirrel on your CD-ROM encyclopedia, but your son is playing computer games with his friends.) You are watching the world gymnastics championship on TV and the winner is an athelete from Belarus, and you're suddenly curious about that country. (Problem: your expensive multivolume encyclopedia is now long in the tooth, and while it has lots of information on the Soviet Union, it doesn't even mention Belarus). At a dinner party, someone mentions chaos theory and you joke that that's the theory you use to organize your tool box--but you do wish you knew what chaos theory really was. (Problem: your top-of-the-line dictionary mentions chaos theory not at all.) Half the battle to be an intelligent person (and to lead your children in that direction) is to be curious about the world and to ask questions; the other half is knowing where to find the right answers. And one of the best places to find answers is a good home encyclopedia.
Now, with Oxford's Family Encyclopedia, you have the most up-to-date, affordable, convenient, and appealing one-volume encyclopedia on the market--and the first such encyclopedia designed specifically for family use. Here is, first of all, the kind of readable but authoritative reference work for which Oxford is justly acclaimed, offering over 15,000 alphabetically arranged entries that put a world of information at your fingertips. There are numerous biographical entries--well over 3,000 in all--that cover artists, writers, and composers; military, political, and world leaders; religious and business figures; scientists and inventors, and much more. Readers will find concise entries on geographical places--from mountains, rivers, and seas to cities, regions, and nations (each nation entry includes a special box with map, flag, and information on the country's history, economy, geographical makeup, and political system). Science is perhaps the biggest category covered, encompassing physics, astronomy, chemistry, the environment, mathematics, the life sciences--including many entries on animals, plants, and minerals--plus hundreds of entries on technology (inventions, machine parts, and so on). There are literary terms, artistic movements, architectural styles, musical periods. Religion and mythology, medicine and health, sports and entertainment, politics and the law. Virtually any topic you would want information on you will find here.
Moreover, the Encyclopedia is packed with 1,500 color illustrations, far more color pictures than any other one-volume encyclopedia on the market, creating an eye-catching page-layout that stimulates the mind. It is the first such encyclopedia to rival CD-ROM encyclopedias for graphic quality. And these illustrations are not merely decorative. Each features a caption that either explains the picture or provides additional information on the topic. An illustration for geological faults, for instance, not only depicts tear faults, reverse faults, Horst faults, and rift faults, but also explains how each fault is formed. And the illustration accompanying the entry on the fig, far from the typical "diagram of plant parts," illustrates instead the symbiotic relationship the fig tree has with the fig wasp, revealing how the tree and insect need each other to reproduce. This colorful format will appeal especially to children, whether you are using the book to show a kindergartner what a flying squirrel looks like, or whether a middle or high school student uses it to look up information on Belarus. Other one-volume encyclopedias available offer small black-and-white illustrations every second or third page, a format that can be daunting to younger readers, who cringe at page after page of type without relief. The Encyclopedia's appealing pages will engage young minds--and re-educate them about what a reference book can be.
Attractive and informative, the volume also offers ease of convenience. Big, multi-volume encyclopedias are unwieldy, both for children to use and for families to shelve. And CD-ROM encyclopedias must be used on the computer, which is not always in the family room. The Encyclopedia is easy to keep in a convenient place--on a desk, on the kitchen counter, on the home entertainment center. When a reference volume sits within an arm's reach, people are more likely to use it. And finally, at forty-five dollars, the Encyclopedia is a great bargain. Indeed, it is so inexpensive that families who already have multivolume or CD encyclopedias will want to purchase the Encyclopedia as a second, ready reference work.
Wide-ranging, authoritative, portable, affordable, and beautifully illustrated, Oxford's Family Encyclopedia will be the mainstay of your home library. When your curiosity is aroused and you have a question about the world around you, it will be the place you look to find the answer.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Settle those Jeopardy battles, do homework, or use this lovely encyclopedia to look up that pesky fact your brain refuses to retrieve. Illustrated with the usual high Oxford quality, clearly written, and loaded with special biography and topic features (including 3,000 biographical profiles), The Family Encyclopedia is a one-volume wonder. Kids ages 8 and older will like its size and heft--just enough to feel substantial, but never daunting.

From Library Journal

Clearly written, impressively compact, and attractively put together, this new encyclopedia digests the world's knowledge in 13,000 brief, up-to-date entries, about 20 percent of which deal with people, both living and dead. Intended for the whole family but "created with secondary school students particularly in mind," the book emphasizes the physical and biological sciences but does not neglect other major subject areas. About 1500 color illustrations accompany the printed text, including some first-rate diagrams explaining scientific principles and phenomena, such as how microwave heating works. The maps, all small-scale, were prepared by a leading cartographer in the United Kingdom. In fact, the work is clearly a British production, from the editors and consultants to the color reproduction firm. On the other hand, its contents are determinedly international, with no apparent British bias. Typically, the arrangement is A-Z, with numerous cross references and no index. Most appropriate for home and school libraries, this small, single-volume encyclopedia competes well with the best in its class, the Concise Columbia Encyclopedia (Houghton, 1994. 3d ed.).?Ken Kister, author of "Kister's Best Encyclopedias," Tampa, Fla.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 768 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; 1st edition (October 23, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 019521367X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195213676
  • Product Dimensions: 10.6 x 8.2 x 1.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #170,609 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars addictive to the curious-minded of any age, June 4, 1999
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This review is from: Oxford Family Encyclopedia: The Ultimate Single-Volume Reference for Home, School and Office (Hardcover)
This encyclopedia is fantastic. Even though it has around 750 pages, it lies flat at any page. Every page has one or more color drawings, photos, maps, and/or diagrams. I bought this book b/c I'm a freelance educational writer, and I frequently need short bits of factual info. to use in creating exercises for students and lessons. This is perfect for that use. Also, do you remember the Friends episode in which Joey buys the "V" encyclopedia but can't afford the whole set, so he only knows about things that start with "V"? Well, THIS is the book he needed: it covers A-Z, and it costs less! If you like facts and trivia or if you have little "holes" where you're supposed to know something, you'll love this book. It's worth the money.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A very readable encyclopedia, October 5, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Oxford Family Encyclopedia: The Ultimate Single-Volume Reference for Home, School and Office (Hardcover)
This is a beautiful one-volume encyclopedia for children (grades 4 and up) and their parents. Its coverage is probably not as extensive as the one-volume Cambridge Encyclopedia or Columbia Encyclopedia; but the Family Encyclopedia is a much more attractive reference book for younger readers because of its clean layout, its easy-to-read typeface (on bright white paper), and especially its numerous color illustrations, including faithful reproductions of Madonna, Clint Eastwood, etc. Definitely recommended.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Compact, colorful, comprehensive, February 10, 1998
This review is from: Oxford Family Encyclopedia: The Ultimate Single-Volume Reference for Home, School and Office (Hardcover)
At 768 pages and crammed with colorful maps and illustrations, the ÒFamily EncyclopediaÓ offers snippets of information in more than 13,000 entires in a format that is ideal for a home office. Call it a super-dictionary, the format is ideal for those of us of which to put to rest a particularly pesky questionable bit of trivia but without access to a set of encyclopedias. The "Family Encylopedia" can supply answers to a host of questions. It shows a diagram of how a Digital Audio Tape records sound, reveals Joan Crawford's real name (Lucille Fay le Sueur), and describes the properties of rudidium (which, as we all remember from high school chemistry, is the silver-white metallic element of the alkali metals).
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