Picture of author.

Chicago Editorial Staff

Author of The Chicago Manual of Style

194+ Works 7,440 Members 39 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: University of Chicago, George R. Lawrence Co., copyright 1907

Series

Works by Chicago Editorial Staff

The Chicago Manual of Style (1906) 6,792 copies, 36 reviews
The Chicago Manual of Style, 18th Edition (2024) 101 copies, 1 review
Encyclopedia Britannica (1956) 25 copies
Mastering Strategy (2000) 24 copies
Medinet Habu 3 copies
The Journal of modern history — Publisher — 2 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

Authorship (28) Chicago (45) citation (33) citations (23) copyediting (24) editing (236) English (101) English language (55) genealogy (32) grammar (198) guide (28) hardcover (27) indexing (47) language (174) manual (44) non-fiction (294) office (35) own (30) printing (37) publishing (101) punctuation (38) reference (1,300) research (27) style (160) style guide (365) stylebook (27) to-read (64) usage (47) writing (821) writing reference (34)

Common Knowledge

Other names
University of Chicago Press
Birthdate
1860
Gender
n/a
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Places of residence
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Chicago, Illinois, USA

Members

Reviews

44 reviews
I love this book. First, I just browsed a bit, and as a language lover, I found every page interesting. Then, I put it to the test. Does it tell you not to split an infinitive? NO! Of course not. English isn't Latin, and furthermore, it gives great examples of when you must split an infinitive for your sentence to make sense. The same holds for the ridiculous rule of not putting a preposition at the end of a sentence. Great advice there as well. I now feel confident turning to this book for show more tricky questions of grammar and punctuation, or just to pass away a few minutes reading it for enjoyment. So far, the lengthy index has made what I was looking for easy to find. show less
One of my professors once told me that this was the "bible for historians," and for anyone in the humanities in general, it is indispensable. It is at once a style guide, a sort of thesaurus, and a manual for writing term papers, theses, dissertations, and books. Sure, Turabian distills this book (and the sin of the latest Turabian is that in a misguided attempt to appeal to more people, they've added a parenthetical reference system to the footnote system she popularized), but sometimes you show more must turn to the Chicago for more information.

As a historian who works on maps, I am still angry that Chicago does not treat them as a source, just illustrations. (Which means Turabian denigrates them, but at least mentions them, and says to put them in quotes, like an article, instead of italics, like a book.) But, I digress. After a few hours of browsing through this book I think it is a good update, more examples, more citations from internet sources, etc.
show less
One of my professors once told me that this was the "bible for historians," and for anyone in the humanities in general, it is indispensable. It is at once a style guide, a sort of thesaurus, and a manual for writing term papers, theses, dissertations, and books. Sure, Turabian distills this book, but sometimes you must turn to the Chicago for more information.

Chicago has finally redone its reference section to do references on maps, images, Indigenous sources, etc. It's a pretty good show more reboot. They've combined the notes-bibliography system style and the author-date style guide into one chapter, emphasizing the former. show less
Oh Chicago Manual, I love the robust narratological power of your footnote-based citation method, but I hate the way you try to be a copyeditor's handbook and publishing guide too, because it makes it way worse to find what I need. Also, too many clickthroughs. And title pages blow on papers. And, paid content? Seriously? Still, you are as far as I know the only one of your kind, and certainly your absence would be missed more than that of either of MLA or APA (but not both).
½

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
194
Also by
1
Members
7,440
Popularity
#3,290
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
39
ISBNs
75
Languages
1
Favorited
3

Charts & Graphs