You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
pollen/tests/bibliography.html

1 line
4.6 KiB
HTML

This file contains invisible Unicode characters!

This file contains invisible Unicode characters that may be processed differently from what appears below. If your use case is intentional and legitimate, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal hidden characters.

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters that may be confused with others in your current locale. If your use case is intentional and legitimate, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to highlight these characters.

<root-function><p><topic class="small">Bibliography</topic></p><p><lc>T</lc>his is not, by any measure, a comprehensive bibliography. Rather, its a selection of favorites from my own bookshelf that I consult most frequently in my work as a writer and a typographer.</p><p><subhead>writing</subhead></p><p>Bryan A. Garner, <book>Garners Modern American Usage</book>, 3rd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">Long before he agreed to write the foreword for my book <book>Typography for Lawyers</book>, Bryan Garner was a hero of mine. Garner thinks and writes about American English in a way thats rigorous, convincing, and accessible. He is stern but not shrill; authoritative but not authoritarian. He is a vigorous advocate for clear, simple writing. His work should be mandatory reading for all writers.</indented></p><p><subhead>Typography</subhead></p><p>Matthew Butterick, <book>Typography for Lawyers</book> (Houston: Jones McClure Publishing, 2010).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">The precursor to <book>Buttericks Practical Typography</book>. Lawyer or not, consider buying a copy, because its a virtuous act. See <xref>how to pay for this book.</xref></indented></p><p>Jan Middendorp, <book>Shaping Text</book> (Amsterdam: BIS Publishers, 2012).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">If you get a second book on typography, get this one. Middendorps beautifully written and illustrated book is full of careful details and lucid explanations.</indented></p><p>Carolina de Bartolo, <book>Explorations in Typography</book> (<slink>explorationsintypography.comhttp://explorationsintypography.com</slink>, 2011).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">Using a Spiekermann essay from <book>Stop Stealing Sheep</book> (see below), de Bartolo shows how different typesetting choices change the effect of the text.</indented></p><p>Cyrus Highsmith, <book>Inside Paragraphs</book> (Boston: Font Bureau, 2012).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">Highsmiths charmingly hand-illustrated book focuses on the paragraph as a unit of typographic interest.</indented></p><p>Robert Bringhurst, <book>The Elements of Typographic Style</book>, 3rd ed. (Vancouver: Hartley and Marks Publishers, 2004).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">Bringhursts book has become something of a standard reference guide among professional typographers, bringing together the history, theory, and practice of typography.</indented></p><p>Ellen Lupton, <book>Thinking With Type</book>, 2nd ed. (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2010).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">Intended as an introduction to typography for design students, Luptons book is more accessible than Bringhursts. It includes full-color illustrations from every era of typography.</indented></p><p><subhead>Fonts</subhead></p><p>Erik Spiekermann and E. M. Ginger, <book>Stop Stealing Sheep &amp; Find Out How Type Works</book>, 2nd ed. (Berkeley, California: Adobe Press, 2002).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">Ginger &amp; Spiekermann, a self-described typomaniac (and author of the <xref>foreword</xref>) explain how fonts work, and how they differ in appearance and in function. My font <xref>Hermes</xref> is among those featured.</indented></p><p>Stephen Coles, <book>The Anatomy of Type</book> (London: Quid Publishing Ltd., 2012).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">Explores the major categories of fonts and their characteristic qualities by examining 100 fonts in detail.</indented></p><p><subhead>Design principles</subhead></p><p>Edward Tufte, <book>Envisioning Information</book>, 4th printing ed. (Cheshire, Connecticut: Graphics Press, 1990).</p><p>Edward Tufte, <book>The Visual Display of Quantitative Information</book>, 2nd ed. (Cheshire, Connecticut: Graphics Press, 2001).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">These are two of my favorite books of all time. Tufte makes an eloquent and compelling case for why design matters. Both books are fantastically interesting and beautifully illustrated with examples of information design from many historical periods.</indented></p><p>William Lidwell, Kritina Holden, and Jill Butler, <book>Universal Principles of Design</book>, 2nd ed. (Beverly, Massachusetts: Rockport Publishers, 2010).</p><p><indented style="position:relative;top:-0.4em">An excellent and accessible introduction to design principles that apply not only to printed documents, but to all objects that we interact with.</indented></p></root-function>