Series: Boston Review Books

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Works (15)

TitlesOrder
Africa's Turn by Edward Miguel
After America's Midlife Crisis by Michael Gecan
The End of the Wild by Stephen M. Meyer
God and the Welfare State by Lew Daly
Inventing American History by William Hogeland
Making Aid Work by Abhijit Vinayak Banerjee
The Men in My Life by Vivian Gornick
Movies and the Moral Adventure of Life by Alan A. Stone
Race, Incarceration, and American Values by Glenn C. Loury
The Road to Democracy in Iran by Akbar Ganji
The Story of Cruel and Unusual by Colin Dayan
Taking Economics Seriously by Dean Baker
What We Know About Climate Change by Kerry Emanuel
Why Nuclear Disarmament Matters by Hans Blix
Why We Cooperate by Michael Tomasello

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Series authors (15)

Works (Title/Author/ISBN)

Series description

Boston Review Books are accessible, short books that take ideas seriously. They are animated by hope, committed to equality, and elude political categories. The editors aim to establish a public space in which people can loosen the hold of conventional preconceptions and start to reason together across the lines others are so busily drawing. The series is published by MIT Press.

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Series?!

How do series work?

To create a series or add a work to it, go to a "work" page. The "Common Knowledge" section now includes a "Series" field. Enter the name of the series to add the book to it.

Works can belong to more than one series. In some cases, as with Chronicles of Narnia, disagreements about order necessitate the creation of more than one series.

Tip: If the series has an order, add a number or other descriptor in parenthesis after the series title (eg., "Chronicles of Prydain (book 1)"). By default, it sorts by the number, or alphabetically if there is no number. If you want to force a particular order, use the | character to divide the number and the descriptor. So, "(0|prequel)" sorts by 0 under the label "prequel."

What isn't a series?

Series was designed to cover groups of books generally understood as such (see Wikipedia: Book series). Like many concepts in the book world, "series" is a somewhat fluid and contested notion. A good rule of thumb is that series have a conventional name and are intentional creations, on the part of the author or publisher. For now, avoid forcing the issue with mere "lists" of works possessing an arbitrary shared characteristic, such as relating to a particular place. Avoid series that cross authors, unless the authors were or became aware of the series identification (eg., avoid lumping Jane Austen with her continuators).

Also avoid publisher series, unless the publisher has a true monopoly over the "works" in question. So, the Dummies guides are a series of works. But the Loeb Classical Library is a series of editions, not of works.

Helpers

lemontwist (15), MLister (2)
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