I sometimes feel I have been in love with reference books for my entire life. As a child of two or three, I could often be found propped against the corner of the sofa with a reference book for company. I couldn’t have been reading Dad’s dictionary, of course, or absorbing the statistics in one of his many prized guides to the vicissitudes of the latest football season, but volumes such as these, I am told, were always sure to occupy me. Something about the weight, perhaps. Or the sound and feel of the pages. Or the pleasure of emulating something I must have seen my dad do daily.
By the time I was old enough to read properly I had already amassed a fairly impressive collection: dictionaries, encyclopaedias, nature handbooks, thesauruses. I was magnetised, as many children were, by The Guinness Book of Records. I would even make reference books (Matthew's Book of Dogs, I discover, might well be extant).
From here, my passion grew until it bordered on the obsessional. As a teen I would buy any work of reference I could find (Thomas H Clancy's English Catholic Books, 1641-1700: A Bibliography has proved extremely useful over the years). In my first week as a doctoral student I blew a reckless portion of my funding on the second, 20-volume edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. I had to transport it to my rooms in a taxi. It is still among my most treasured possessions.
Any reader with this much enthusiasm for the reference book is bound, of course, to want to read books about reference books (even books about books about reference books – a neglected genre), and over the years I have worked my way through many such volumes (see, for example, AJ Jacobs's The Know-It-All, in which he chronicles the experience of reading the entirety of The Encyclopaedia Britannica (44 million words) over the course of a year; or Ammon Shea's Reading the Oxford English Dictionary: One Man, One Year, 21,730 Pages). But I have never read – have never encountered – a complete history (what is it with reference-nuts and completion?) of the reference book.
And after finishing Jack Lynch's warm, large and enlarging new book, You Could Look It Up: The Reference Shelf from Ancient Babylon to Wikipedia, I still haven't. This is not a criticism: a complete history of the reference book is barely conceivable, let alone writable. And anyway, Lynch does not, if we ignore the intimation of comprehensiveness implied by his title, aim to be exhaustive. What he does aim to do is offer a partial history of "50 great reference books, from the third millennium BCE to the present, all of them ambitious attempts to collect a vast amount of knowledge and to present it to the world in a usable form".
Why? Partly out of love: Lynch describes his work as “a love letter to the great dictionaries, encyclopaedias and atlases”; the world they structure and create, he says, “is positively exuberant, passionate, bursting with knowledge”.
But he has also chosen to attend to them because of their historical and cultural importance: “When we turn an ancient dictionary’s pages,” he writes, “we read something never meant for our eyes, and we get to overhear the dead talking among themselves ... Reference books shape the world.”
In addressing this curious efficacy, Lynch wants to show – “with only a small bit of exaggeration” – how “the reference book is responsible for the spread of empires, the scientific revolution, the French Revolution, and the invention of the computer”.
This is an argument that would require rather more than “a small bit of exaggeration”. But Lynch knows this, and when he gets around to making a case for the influence of a particular book, he usually does so with a fair degree of subtlety.
Even when he is writing about the 28-volume Encyclopedie of Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert, a work that historians commonly regard as fundamental to the radical intellectual challenges that would contribute to the French Revolution, he refuses to go so far as to say that it was the sole cause of the events that took place in 1789.
Which is quite right. But it is also quite dull: an observation familiar to anyone who is even casually acquainted with the history of the French Revolution. This lack of novelty is often apparent in the conclusions Lynch draws about the importance of his chosen books: the observation that “encyclopaedias can be the site of important cross-cultural dialogue”, for example, is not a resounding way to close a peroration.
But this is not a book to be visited for the strength and the freshness of its argument. In common with the works it discusses, it gives up its riches unexpectedly. To read it is to feel a sense of repeated serendipity and wonder: you are forever stumbling across pieces of information you didn't know you wanted to know, as exemplified by the near-useless definitions that pepper John Kersey's A New English Dictionary of 1702 ("Ake, as, my head akes"), or by the fact that the word algorithm derives from the name of a ninth-century Islamic polymath, Muhammad ibn Musa Al Khwarizmi, whose The Concise Book on Calculation by Restoration and Compensation contains the source of the word algebra (al jabr – "compensation").
The book is also full of delightful anecdotes (we learn that the Roman naturalist Pliny died when, following an eruption of Mount Vesuvius, he sailed towards the volcano for a better look and was asphyxiated by falling ash), and surprising instances of beautiful and moving prose.
This is from an entry in the Erya (third century BC) – the oldest surviving dictionary of the Chinese language – entitled "Explaining Heaven": "Round-hollow and very blue, this is Heaven. In springtime, Heaven is blue; in summertime, bright; in autumn, clear; in wintertime, Heaven is wide up. These are the four seasons."
There are moments of less obvious beauty (I urge you to look up the "definition" of blood in the greatest early dictionary of India, the fourth-century Amarakosha, but these have their value and they contribute to the cumulative sense of gratitude and sadness that Lynch generates over the course of the book.
Gratitude for the immense labour and physical torment to which our ancestors from all over the globe were prepared to subject themselves in order to preserve, pattern, and map the world and its creations. Sadness, because the story of the reference shelf is also a story of loss: electronic reference works are displacing print; electronic searches are displacing the pleasures of browsing; the advent of GPS is a threat to the beauty of printed maps. The Encyclopaedia Britannica has already announced the end of its print edition. The OED might follow suit.
Lynch is sensitive to the possibilities and the promise of new forms of categorising the world. Yet he is also sorry that the great bound reference books might soon be lost. Short of buying them and loving them and living with them yourself, You Could Look It Up is the most powerful way of appreciating why you should be sorry too.
Matthew Adams lives in London and writes for the TLS, The Spectator and the Literary Review.
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UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Mohammed bin Zayed Majlis
Mohammed bin Zayed Majlis
Barbie
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UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Specs
Engine: Electric motor generating 54.2kWh (Cooper SE and Aceman SE), 64.6kW (Countryman All4 SE)
Power: 218hp (Cooper and Aceman), 313hp (Countryman)
Torque: 330Nm (Cooper and Aceman), 494Nm (Countryman)
On sale: Now
Price: From Dh158,000 (Cooper), Dh168,000 (Aceman), Dh190,000 (Countryman)
Profile of Foodics
Founders: Ahmad AlZaini and Mosab AlOthmani
Based: Riyadh
Sector: Software
Employees: 150
Amount raised: $8m through seed and Series A - Series B raise ongoing
Funders: Raed Advanced Investment Co, Al-Riyadh Al Walid Investment Co, 500 Falcons, SWM Investment, AlShoaibah SPV, Faith Capital, Technology Investments Co, Savour Holding, Future Resources, Derayah Custody Co.
Mohammed bin Zayed Majlis
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The specs: 2018 Audi Q5/SQ5
Price, base: Dh183,900 / Dh249,000
Engine: 2.0L, turbocharged in-line four-cylinder / 3.0L, turbocharged V6
Gearbox: Seven-speed automatic / Eight-speed automatic
Power: 252hp @ 5,000rpm / 354hp @ 5,400rpm
Torque: 370Nm @ 1,600rpm / 500Nm @ 1,370rpm
Fuel economy: combined 7.2L / 100km / 8.3L / 100km
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Mohammed bin Zayed Majlis
Profile
Company: Justmop.com
Date started: December 2015
Founders: Kerem Kuyucu and Cagatay Ozcan
Sector: Technology and home services
Based: Jumeirah Lake Towers, Dubai
Size: 55 employees and 100,000 cleaning requests a month
Funding: The company’s investors include Collective Spark, Faith Capital Holding, Oak Capital, VentureFriends, and 500 Startups.
Ferrari 12Cilindri specs
Engine: naturally aspirated 6.5-liter V12
Power: 819hp
Torque: 678Nm at 7,250rpm
Price: From Dh1,700,000
Available: Now
The biog
Age: 59
From: Giza Governorate, Egypt
Family: A daughter, two sons and wife
Favourite tree: Ghaf
Runner up favourite tree: Frankincense
Favourite place on Sir Bani Yas Island: “I love all of Sir Bani Yas. Every spot of Sir Bani Yas, I love it.”
Red flags
- Promises of high, fixed or 'guaranteed' returns.
- Unregulated structured products or complex investments often used to bypass traditional safeguards.
- Lack of clear information, vague language, no access to audited financials.
- Overseas companies targeting investors in other jurisdictions - this can make legal recovery difficult.
- Hard-selling tactics - creating urgency, offering 'exclusive' deals.
Courtesy: Carol Glynn, founder of Conscious Finance Coaching
WISH
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Milestones on the road to union
1970
October 26: Bahrain withdraws from a proposal to create a federation of nine with the seven Trucial States and Qatar.
December: Ahmed Al Suwaidi visits New York to discuss potential UN membership.
1971
March 1: Alex Douglas Hume, Conservative foreign secretary confirms that Britain will leave the Gulf and “strongly supports” the creation of a Union of Arab Emirates.
July 12: Historic meeting at which Sheikh Zayed and Sheikh Rashid make a binding agreement to create what will become the UAE.
July 18: It is announced that the UAE will be formed from six emirates, with a proposed constitution signed. RAK is not yet part of the agreement.
August 6: The fifth anniversary of Sheikh Zayed becoming Ruler of Abu Dhabi, with official celebrations deferred until later in the year.
August 15: Bahrain becomes independent.
September 3: Qatar becomes independent.
November 23-25: Meeting with Sheikh Zayed and Sheikh Rashid and senior British officials to fix December 2 as date of creation of the UAE.
November 29: At 5.30pm Iranian forces seize the Greater and Lesser Tunbs by force.
November 30: Despite a power sharing agreement, Tehran takes full control of Abu Musa.
November 31: UK officials visit all six participating Emirates to formally end the Trucial States treaties
December 2: 11am, Dubai. New Supreme Council formally elects Sheikh Zayed as President. Treaty of Friendship signed with the UK. 11.30am. Flag raising ceremony at Union House and Al Manhal Palace in Abu Dhabi witnessed by Sheikh Khalifa, then Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi.
December 6: Arab League formally admits the UAE. The first British Ambassador presents his credentials to Sheikh Zayed.
December 9: UAE joins the United Nations.
RACE CARD
5pm: Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan Racing Festival Purebred Arabian Cup Conditions (PA); Dh 200,000 (Turf) 1,600m
5.30pm: Sheikha Fatima bint Mubarak Cup Conditions (PA); Dh 200,000 (T) 1,600m
6pm: Sheikh Sultan bin Zayed Al Nahyan National Day Cup Listed (TB); Dh 380,000 (T) 1,600m
6.30pm: Sheikh Sultan bin Zayed Al Nahyan National Day Group 3 (PA); Dh 500,000 (T) 1,600m
7pm: Sheikh Sultan bin Zayed Al Nahyan National Day Jewel Crown Group 1 (PA); Dh 5,000,000 (T) 2,200m
7.30pm: Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan Racing Festival Handicap (PA); Dh 150,000 (T) 1,400m
8pm: Wathba Stallions Cup Handicap (PA) Dh 100,000 (T); 1,400m
Killing of Qassem Suleimani
The five pillars of Islam
Killing of Qassem Suleimani
Killing of Qassem Suleimani
Scoreline
Germany 2
Werner 9', Sane 19'
Netherlands 2
Promes 85', Van Dijk 90'
SERIE A FIXTURES
Friday (UAE kick-off times)
Sassuolo v Bologna (11.45pm)
Saturday
Brescia v Torino (6pm)
Inter Milan v Verona (9pm)
Napoli v Genoa (11.45pm)
Sunday
Cagliari v Verona (3.30pm)
Udinese v SPAL (6pm)
Sampdoria v Atalanta (6pm)
Lazio v Lecce (6pm)
Parma v Roma (9pm)
Juventus v Milan (11.45pm)
More from Rashmee Roshan Lall
If you go...
Fly from Dubai or Abu Dhabi to Chiang Mai in Thailand, via Bangkok, before taking a five-hour bus ride across the Laos border to Huay Xai. The land border crossing at Huay Xai is a well-trodden route, meaning entry is swift, though travellers should be aware of visa requirements for both countries.
Flights from Dubai start at Dh4,000 return with Emirates, while Etihad flights from Abu Dhabi start at Dh2,000. Local buses can be booked in Chiang Mai from around Dh50
Key facilities
- Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
- Premier League-standard football pitch
- 400m Olympic running track
- NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
- 600-seat auditorium
- Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
- An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
- Specialist robotics and science laboratories
- AR and VR-enabled learning centres
- Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
The five pillars of Islam