Master the essentials of library classification—from theory to practical application.
This introductory work surveys the meaning, purpose, and methods of organizing books in a library. It combines historical insight with clear, step‑by‑step guidance on how to build useful classification schemes and what makes them work in real libraries. The book connects theory to practice, showing how schedules, notations, and indexes help readers find what they need quickly.
What you’ll experience:
- An overview of key classification schemes, including how they organize knowledge from source to application.
- Practical guidance on creating and using a classified catalogue, with notes on subject, author, and title indexing.
- Ways to relate related subjects across a library, and how to plan for open access, reference work, and fiction.
- Appendices that point to important authorities and foundational readings for deeper study.
- A clear path for beginners to build confidence in classification, cataloguing, and library planning.
- Real-world considerations for shelf organization, guides, and card catalog design.
Ideal for readers new to library work and for librarians seeking a solid, practical grounding in classification methods and their everyday use.