Online Reference Essay, Research Paper
Online referenceBook publishing is like farming: a lot happens in the spring, summer is pastoral, autumn is hectic and everyone gets drunk in winter. Just now, as Observer readers will know, the Anglo-American book trade is going through one of its seasonal spasms.Charles Frazier, bestselling author of Cold Mountain, has sold his new (unwritten) book to Random House for $5 million and all over Manhattan people who should know better are crying ‘Foul!’ As Mark Twain memorably put it, when people complain that ‘it’s not the money, it’s the principle of the thing’, you just know it’s the money.Next to the universal view that ‘everyone has a book in them’, there’s a widespread belief that books and money, like Damon and Pythias, go hand in hand. Newspaper headlines reporting multi-million-dollar deals give the public the largely erroneous impression that you have only to serve up what the publishers are looking for to stumble upon riches beyond the dreams of avarice.Big advances certainly attract acres of newspaper coverage, but in the scheme of things they are small potatoes. The real money is found not among the volumes piled high on the table at the front of the bookshop but on the shelves of reference books tucked away at the back next to the fire exit.Works of reference remain the biggest and most profitable business in the world of books. English dictionaries, sold from Oxford to Osaka, generate around £50 million in annual turnover. In this lucrative market, four publishers – Oxford, Collins, Longman and, my favourite, Chambers – slug it out for mastery, with newcomer Bloomsbury, publisher of the Encarta dictionary, snapping towels at the side of the ring.About two years ago, Oxford pulled off a stunning commercial coup by putting its vast lexicographical database online at www.oed.com.For those who love to fossick through the pages of a great dictionary, the OED Online is a remarkable experience. At the click of a mouse, the word-surfer can summon up the etymology of any item of interest from autochthonous to zeugma. Subscribers can retrieve the 60 million words this great dictionary employs to describe the 750,000 terms used in English during the past 1,000 years. It offers a truly astounding picture of the English language as an extraordinary living phenomenon.OUP is now launching a