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200 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1997
Off the Map: the curious histories of place-names by Derek Nelson is a well-researched but not especially engaging overview of the political, social, and cultural effect of cartographic naming conventions. As other reviewers have pointed out, and I agree, Nelson has not written a history as such but more of a general reference guide that brings together facts and events without much connective tissue in the text. Too bad as I think he has a good idea here and an editor that insisted on a closer attention to the narrative flow would have helped Mr. Nelson. Two examples: Chapters five and ten should really have been one chapter as the topics and the author’s approach to them, in my opinion, are so similar that it was hard for me as a reader to fathom out why he separated them? I kept wondering as I reach chapter ten, why was I reading about the same issue and points as I did earlier? Chapter eleven is only a few pages and would have been better presented as an epilogue or folded into another chapter altogether. The last chapter isn’t developed fully and reads almost as if Mr. Nelson had reached the end of the contracted number of words so needed to wind it up – brisk but not informative.
This is an okay book. I picked it up hoping to learn a bit about cartographic naming practices and that is exactly what I did.