Review: The Elements of Technical Writing 
The elements of technical writing includes a basic definition of technical writing--'writing about subjects in technical disciplines'--as well as a high-level outline of the book. Few prefaces contain as thorough a summary of changes as Pearsall offers. The summary of changes in this second edition acknowledges the necessity for current information in the changing technical writing arena, listing several specific changes from the first edition.
Williams, Jocelyn Crump. Technical Communication Online (2003). Articles>Reviews>Writing>Technical Writing
Review: English for the Energy Industries: Oil, Gas, and Petrochemicals
Not only people preparing to work in the oil, gas, and petrochemical industries, but also students of industrial chemistry and chemical engineering can immensely benefit from the material provided in this coursebook and supplementary CDs.
Kumar Panda, Prasanta. International Journal for Technical Communication (2008). Articles>Reviews>Business Communication>Engineering
Review: Envisioning Science: The Design and Craft of the Science Image 
As an accomplished photographer of science and engineering research, Felice Frankel knows how to capture her readers' attention—her exquisite images in Envisioning science communicate their amazing power, by her design, and ultimately 'teach us to see' science in a different way. We are witnesses to the excitement of discovery represented in such images as cadmium selenide nanocrystals, self-assembled polyhedra, yeast colonies, and mouse embryo lungs, thereby illustrating the book's educational value.
Winn, Wendy. Technical Communication Online (2002). Articles>Reviews>Graphic Design>Scientific Communication
Review: Eric Meyer on CSS: Mastering the Language of Web Design 
When I first looked at this book, I was very much impressed with its layout. There are lots of beautiful and clear examples, along with well laid-out pages. Chapters consist of various CSS projects, such as creating an events calendar. You can download companion files for each chapter in zipped form from a Web site the author has set up. So the book is in fact an instructional one, one that you can use to learn as you go or just read straight through, depending on your preference.
Hawley, Todd. Technical Communication Online (2003). Articles>Reviews>Web Design>CSS
Ethnographic methodology is nothing new to the field of rhetoric because the literature in the field is constantly filled with intriguing discoveries from ethnographic studies. These studies, however, usually do not focus on private businesses because of the difficulty of gaining access to these research sites. Moreover, if ethnographic studies are permitted, they usually focus on American nonprofit organizations. Thus, Ethnography at Work, by Brian Moeran, offers a unique research site--an international private business organization--that should spark interest in readers.
Toth, Christopher. Journal of Business and Technical Communication (2008). Articles>Reviews>Ethnographies
Review: Everything and the Kitchen Sink
I've used personas for years (though some might regard my process as a slightly heretical perversion of the method). I always think about the big picture, and I was just thinking BIG about personas at work when The Persona Lifecycle landed on my desk. Given my review of what's out there, The Persona Lifecycle is the most comprehensive book on personas I've come across. If you're so inclined, it can taking you from novice to expert. The authors, Jonathan Pruit and Tamara Adlin, take advantage of extensive teaching experience and punctuate their discussion with lots of real-world examples, case studies, anecdotes, bright ideas and handy guidelines. That being said, it's not an easy read, and it's not for everybody.
Govella, Austin. Boxes and Arrows (2007). Articles>Reviews>User Centered Design>Personas
Review: Examining Technology's Wake
Based on world-wide archival research involving more than a hundred researchers, interviews with surviving witnesses, and other sources, the book reconstructs the development and utilization, from the end of the 1890s on, of the Hollerith punch card machine -- the first modern system for rapid processing of data.
Ornatowski, Cezar M. Lore (2002). Articles>Reviews>Technology
Review: Exploring Leadership Conversations 
Gail Fairhurst's book (2007) on discursive leadership is a highly welcome Gcontribution to the endeavor of establishing discourse analysis as a substantial approach to management communication. It presents a range of theories and methodologies for doing research on the central topics of leadership and on the crucial activities in management, such as instruction, mentoring, and performance appraisals. As a linguist doing research on management meetings, I would like to comment on the contribution that the book may make to theory and training in the fields of communication and management, and I wish to make some suggestions about the way forward for empirical research on discourse in management settings.
Svennevig, Jan. Management Communication Quarterly. Articles>Reviews>Management
Review: Faceted Metadata for Information Architecture and Search
Sometimes first impressions are a great way to gauge the likelihood of a successful experience. This wasn't one of those times. I was deeply concerned that I'd signed myself up for some esoteric discussion on the proper use of metadata, but pleasantly surprised to find a real-world interface solution for dealing with large information collections--exactly what the summary said this course would cover.
Frederick, Jessyca. UXmatters (2006). Articles>Reviews>Information Design
Review: Farewell, Netscape, but I Suppose It's Time
Since it's been a decade since Netscape was relevant, I guess it was overdue. But that doesn't make it any easier to say goodbye to an old friend, no matter how long it's been since you had any fun together.
Connoly, P.J. Software Development Times (2008). Articles>Reviews>History>Web Browsers
Many grammar reference works take what is a relatively simple subject and, with unnecessary expansion and elaboration, turn it into an impenetrably dull experience for the reader. In this article, I'll take a brief look at three books that offer an easy and readable alternative.
GaryConroy.com (1992). Articles>Reviews>Style Guides
Review: The Fine Art of Copyediting 
Even though you might not be a copyeditor in a publishing house, the information that Stainton provides can be useful to any editor as well as to any writer.
Staples, Jeff. Technical Communication Online (2004). Articles>Reviews>Editing
Review: Getting to Know the XSL Family of Standards: A Review of The XSL Companion
If you need to learn XSL, or think it might be a career-enhancing move, there are currently very few books that describe XSL. In fact, some of these books can be overwhelming in size and in programming detail. The XSL Companion is different, and, I feel, aptly named a 'companion'.
Boeri, Bob. Boston Broadside (2001). Articles>Reviews>XSL
Los grafos son la representación natural de las redes, en las que estamos cada vez más incluidos. Exploramos qué son los grafos, para qué sirven y algunas reglas para dibujarlos bien.
Dursteler, Juan Carlos. InfoVis (2004). (Spanish) Articles>Reviews>Software>Technical Illustration
Review: Graphic Designer's Digital Printing and Prepress Handbook 
The Graphic Designer's Digital Printing and Prepress Handbook is not a beginner's manual. Sidles does not walk you step-by-step through the basics of trapping or scanning. Instead, hers is an approach that expands on the knowledge of the graphic design professional. I think her aim is to help you become someone who easily knows how to avoid buying paper that will curl or using overprinted type that is illegible. Sidles, with her print production experience, seems to care about sharing the wisdom she has acquired through decades of haps and mishaps—no small benefit.
Blount Brodersen, Carolyn. Technical Communication Online (2004). Articles>Reviews>Prepress>Graphic Design
Review: GUI Bloopers 2.0: Common User Interface Design DON'Ts and DO's
GUI Bloopers 2.0 describes common user-interface mistakes found in today's software products and services, and provides design rules and guidelines to avoid them. Johnson describes the design decisions that lead to misuse of controls, poor navigation, prose-riddled labels, bad design and layout, faulty interaction, and poor responsiveness. GUI Bloopers 2.0 is well illustrated with hundreds of examples from real products and online services, and stories from his own experience.
Dick, David J. Usability Interface (2007). Articles>Reviews>User Interface
A new book in the popular O'Reilly 'Hacks' series shows you how to find and create your own mashups, overlaying all kinds of interesting information on Google maps.
Sherman, Chris. Search Engine Watch (2006). Articles>Reviews>Web Design>Geography
Review: Half the Truth and Something Like the Truth
As an art director, I'm an avowed secret handshake guy from way back. They teach it to us in design school when they make us swear on a stack of Pantone color selectors and old type specimen books that we'll never reveal the secrets of the design world, especially to editors and writers (word people). Early reviews of Type & Layout have been ecstatic, so I had wondered whether someone had finally sold the secret handshake to the enemy. I shouldn't have worried. This is not really a design book, and it is not a book that most designers are going to care for. What worries me is that nondesigners won't know that.
Fleshman, Steven D. Editorial Eye, The (1995). Articles>Reviews>Graphic Design
Review: The Handbook of Digital Publishing 
The Handbook of Digital Publishing is a remarkable work for both its breadth of content and the quality of explanation. The handbook is, quite simply, overwhelming. From animation to ZIP files, surely these two volumes have it covered. I looked up things I knew and things I didn't. For both, I found in Kleper a lucid, detailed explanation, usually complete with topic history, technical specifications, and options for use.
Hudak-David, Ginny. Technical Communication Online (2002). Articles>Reviews>Publishing>Online
Review: The Handbook of Mentoring at Work: Theory, Research, and Practice 
By using the term 'mentoring at work,' the editors, Belle Rose Ragins and Kathy Kram, suggest that they are putting scholars in conversation with each other in their attempts to figure out what mentoring work is and how mentoring actually works.
Weller, Rebecca L., Suzy D'Enbeau and Patrice M. Buzzanell. Management Communication Quarterly (2008). Articles>Reviews>Mentoring
Review: Handbook of Technical Writing 
As with previous editions, the editors have done a marvelous job. This is the type of book that every writer should have. As I stated before, it is not a how-to-write book, but more of a 'tools for writing' book. I find myself referring to it often when I'm thinking of how to pronounce a specific word or how to go about putting together a proposal, abstract or white paper, or even how to interview an engineer or programmer for information about a product I'm documenting.
Hawley, Todd. Technical Communication Online (2004). Articles>Reviews>Writing>Technical Writing
Review: Health and the Rhetoric of Medicine

Health and the Rhetoric of Medicine is a fine introduction to the burgeoning field of medical rhetoric and an excellent addition to the annals of rhetorical criticism in general. Written by Judy Z. Segal from the University of British Columbia, the work is solidly grounded in the mainstay rhetorical traditions of Burke, Perelman and Olbrects-Tyteca, Booth, and Aristotle. But Health and the Rhetoric of Medicine is hardly conservative in its mission or methodology, and the result is a work that captures the essence of discursive encounters in medicine, especially those between doctors and patients and their families, and yet unabashedly attempts to reform these encounters for the betterment of all parties involved.
Jablonski, Jeffrey and Michael J. Zerbe. Journal of Business and Technical Communication (2007). Articles>Reviews>Scientific Communication>Biomedical
Review: The Hidden History of Information Management
What strategies has society employed to collect, manage, and store information, even with the constant threat of oversupply, and still make this information accessible and meaningful to people over time?
Goodman, Bob. Boxes and Arrows (2007). Articles>Reviews>Information Design>History
Review: High Performance Web Sites
Implement these techniques and your sites will be faster. They won't be just a little zippier--we're talking orders of magnitude here.
Pennell, Matthew. Digital Web Magazine (2007). Articles>Reviews>Web Design
Review: Hot Text: Web Writing That Works
This book will help you improve any type of written communication, and it's a fun read to boot. The authors know what they're talking about and have the experience to back up their words. Both have spent many years writing for Web audiences. In addition to Web writing, their combined relevant experience includes journalism, technical communication, art, TV and radio, and teaching.
Frick, Geri. TECHWR-L (2004). Articles>Reviews>Web Design>Writing
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