eugene@nas.nasa.gov (Eugene N. Miya) (04/04/91)
%A Mark Monmonier %T How to Lie with Maps %I U. Chicago Press %C Chicago %D 1991 $12.95 Some time in the last week, I heard about this book. I chanced to see it in Printer's Inc. (Mountain View, and probably in Palo Alto). The title is a take off on D. Huff's "How to Lie with Statistics" the classic thin book on basic statistics. Huff is one of the acknowledgements. Maps are without question the most pervasive and influential images in our world. The "signal to noise" ratio is greater on a map than any other image in society. They model ideas like scale and proportion and symbolism. More imagery (like the so-called "scientific visualizations") should strive for the quality of good maps. Contents: Introduction Elements of the Map [Legends, Scale, symbology, projections] Map Generalization: Little White Lies and Lots of Them Blunders that Mislead Maps that Advertise Development Maps (or How to Seduce the Town Board) Maps for Political Propaganda Maps, Defense and Disinformation: Fool Thine Enemy Data Maps: Making Nonsense of the Census Color: Attraction and Distraction (No color in the book) An excellent and useful set of references. All this from a quickie scan. The author is a geography prof at Sycracuse. A shortcoming of the book is that it seems to fail to talk about the limitations of models. It does talk about: distortion, simplification, generalization, illusion. The author fortunately stays away from determining the length of the coastline of England (the topical example from Chaos theory). Still, the title, like Huff's book, catches the eye. It skirts some of the issues of geographic information systems (e.g., it topically mentioned electromagnetic pulse in the defense section: DMA readers note). The book is not quite as presumptous as Edward Tufte's two good books (i.e., Ducks or color) on data display. "How-to" is fairly inexpensive so I recommend buying it. "How-to" is NOT specifically designed to teach cartography. Other books are for the student, instead, this is for the map user. If you are an individual lacking "a sense of maps," unfortunately, this book won't help (you'd best start off with a good geometry text [perhaps Bill if you are reading this, you can start on the book we've been talking about]. I think chapter two "Elements" is the best chapter. The other are examples. Followups to rec.arts.books. Comments to me via email. Some reader of the geography mailing list can forward this quick review I've lost my mail path for it. Charles, if you want a review for Pixel I'll write something up more formally, let me know. --eugene miya, NASA Ames Research Center, eugene@orville.nas.nasa.gov Resident Cynic, Rock of Ages Home for Retired Hackers {uunet,mailrus,other gateways}!ames!eugene