Monday, November 16, 2009

I hate Endnotes


Nick has reminded me that I hate endnotes with a passion.  However, this hatred aside, I do believe that endnotes are the standard for publishers trying to bring more scholarly works to the mainstream. Whether this is useful  - I don't know. I am sure publishers would have done some sort of research into the issue. (I lie, Nick, the publishers union has my family hostage and are forcing me to write this.)

That aside, one of the worst cases of endnotes for me was reading Martin Hengel's Four Gospels and the One Gospel of Jesus Christ. The book is 1/3 endnotes -  rather interesting endnotes. Endnotes that had me constantly flipping through. It really did annoy me - I just want to stay on one page, not jump ahead, read the next 10 footnotes to avoid turning back, going back to the main text, forgetting the footnotes I previously attempted to remember, etc. You get the point, not nice!

Another odd case of endnotes was with Ben Witherington's The Gospel Code. There were no numbers or markers that there was going to be a reference, you would just turn to the endnote section hoping to see an exert of the sentence with a note after it. It was really odd and confusing!

4 comments:

  1. I have a book called, "A Hard Look at a Hard Question" (or something like that). It is a book on the topic of hell, and every chapter has at least 100 endnotes, with the average being about 150-180 footnotes a chapter.

    It was insane reading it. But it was a very good read.

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  2. It unnecessarily takes away from the reading experience in my opinion. But maybe we are all the odd ones out who actually care about the citations and notes?

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  3. That's how you tell a really good book these days: it requires two bookmarks, one for the text page and one for the endnotes page.

    It is a royal pain to use, though, I agree. Especially in endnote freaks like Hengel. Multiple placemarkers are for bibles, not regular books.

    Chuck Grantham

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  4. I collect my old train tickets for the purpose of multiple bookmarks. It does, however, make my books look rather strange.

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