H-Net Review Guidelines and Style Sheet
You may type the review directly into the TinyMCE text editor in the Reviews Management System, or you may do all your work in another word processing program, such as MS Word, and then copy and paste the review into TinyMCE. We recommend that you type your review directly into TinyMCE, which will protect the integrity of diacritics, character sets, computerized functions, etc. Similar to other word processing programs, TinyMCE will perform and accept standard computerized functions such as italics, underlining, bolding, etc.
Review Title
Under the new guidelines, a descriptive review title is no longer mandatory. The Review Title is specifically not the title of the book review under review. Should you choose to provide one, please make it succinct. All major words in the title should be capitalized; do not capitalize conjunctions, prepositions, articles, etc., unless they are the first word of the title or subtitle (if applicable).
You will be asked for the Review Title when you first enter the New Review screen. You may choose to leave this blank. Please be aware that the title you provide in this field will be incorporated into the review. So if you include a review title, please ensure that it appears in the "Title" field as you want it to appear in the review itself.
Text Guidelines:
H-Net generally follows the Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed. (2010).
All text should begin flush with the left margin. Please do not indent anything anywhere in the review, including titles, paragraphs, and block quotations.
Single-space the text, with a double space between paragraphs. Do not use tabs or extra spaces anywhere in the review.
Following CMS, H-Net now recommends one space after all punctuation.
Titles of all works need to be clearly set off. Titles of works such as books, films, journals, plays, songs, etc. should be italicized; titles of articles, stories, and poems should be placed in quotation marks.
Page numbers should be supplied in a parenthetic source citation in the text for all quoted passages from the book under review. Please do not abbreviate inclusive page numbers (use "pp. 211-212," not "pp. 211-12"). Note that punctuation generally follows the citation, as in this example, where the period falls after the last parenthesis:
Kent writes, "I knew then that my life would never be the same" (p. 57).
Please provide an individual's full name (first and last) at the first mention of that individual in the text of the review (thus, "According to Lois Lane..." rather than "According to Lane..."). The exceptions to this rule are pen names, names from premodern eras where no first name is given or easily obtainable, and, in a very few instances specific, obvious exceptions--for example, Hitler and Luther on H-German; Shakespeare on H-Albion, Erasmus on most networks. Even for these, H-Net prefers a first and last name for the first mention because reviews are often reposted on other networks.
For many works (books, movies, poems, etc.) noted in the text of the review, it is sufficient (and preferred) to provide the name of the author and title, along with the date of publication in parentheses within the body of the review. In this instance an endnote is not necessary. Place the publication/production year in parentheses immediately after the title, with no intervening punctuation: "In Superman Returns (2006), the producer shows..." For longer or unwieldy citations (to journal articles, websites, theses, etc.), the reference should be placed in an endnote.
The default assumption is that publication dates will always be provided for works noted in reviews; however, if the publication date of a particular source is uncertain (if for example it is old enough that its exact provenance is in academic dispute) that fact should be noted when you submit the review to your editor.
Please treat endnotes as an exception and use them very sparingly, primarily for bibliographical references to sources other than the book under review. Generally, the endnote number should come at the end of a sentence, in brackets, and in the same position in which the superscript number would ordinarily fall--usually after the sentence-ending punctuation, without any intervening space:
Lex Luthor has written extensively of his struggles with Superman.[1]
At the end of the review, place the word "Notes" (or "Note" if there is only one) at the left margin, in plain text (without quotation marks, a colon, or italicization). For example:
[Last line of the review.]
Notes
[1]. Lex Luthor, My Struggles with Superman (Metropolis: Planet Books, 1999).
[2]. Lois Lane, "My Struggles with Superman," in Superman: The Man, the Myth, ed. Lana Lang (Metropolis: Planet Books, 2001), 202-238.
[3]. Perry White, "Why I Hired Clark Kent," The Journal of Superhero History 25 (2000): 572-593.
H-NET Reviews Style Sheet
Below you will find a brief style sheet. These are some general rules. Please proofread your text carefully.
For the sake of consistency, H-Net uses American spelling and punctuation styles.
Use "US" and "UK" as adjectives, "United States" and "United Kingdom" as nouns
In a list of items, a serial comma should appear before "and," for example: "... green, blue, red, purple, and yellow."
In general, spell out whole numbers from one through one hundred, and any of these numbers followed by "hundred," "thousand," "million," and so on: "fifteen thousand soldiers," "three million people." Otherwise, use numerals (as always for dates, as 1492). Use a comma in numbers of four digits or more when they are expressed in numerals: "1,215." But use numerals in "10 percent," and for the sake of consistency, if the use of numerals is required for one number in a group of numbers in close proximity to each other in your text, use numerals for them all: "482 soldiers left home, but only 62 returned."
Put a space both before and after a three-dot ellipsis. However, do not put spaces between the dots, because the dots may otherwise become separated on different lines in various e-mail programs or on the Web. For example: “Special representation rights ... are typically intended to be a temporary response.”
Similarly, use two hyphens to represent an em-dash, and do not put a space before, between, or after them: "word--word."
Use lowercase and arabic numerals to refer to numbered parts of a book, even when the book itself uses roman numerals or some other system: "chapter 5," "part 2," and so on.
The names of such parts of a book as introductions, prefaces, and forewords are not treated as titles.
Use double quotation marks to refer to a word as a word: I like chocolate; the word "chocolate" has nine letters.
Possessives of names and singular words ending in an "s" are generally formed in the usual way, by adding an apostrophe and an "s"--so, "Dickens's novels." Names of ethnic and racial groups, and other similarly sensitive issues, should conform to American usage and the best scholarly practices in your field. If you have a question about usage on the network you are reviewing for, please be sure to ask your editor.
The names of many historical events (such as the Boston Tea Party and the Great Depression) are capitalized. See CMS 8.74. The same is true of most major wars and revolutions, such as the American Civil War, the Seven Years’ War, or the French Revolution. See CMS 8.112-113.
H-NET List of Commonly Used Words and Phrases
This list of spelling and capitalization is based on The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th ed. (2003), chapters 7-9. (These are examples of spelling and capitalization, not preferred uses.) Please consult your CMS for detailed explanations and numerous other examples. See especially 7.90 (Hyphenation Guide for Compounds, Combining Forms, and Prefixes), 8.65 (Lowercased Words Derived from Proper Nouns), 8.66-8.76 (Names of Organizations), and 8.77-8.93 (Historical and Cultural Terms).
50 percent; a 10 percent increase (no hyphen)
the 1990s (no apostrophe); the nineties
1920s-style (both adjective and adverb take hyphen)
administration; the Carter administration
African Americans; African American history (* Note that CMS no longer recommends a hyphen in the adjective.)
antebellum
the Bible; biblical
the Capitol (building), but the capital city
in chapter 3
the church today; the United Methodist Church (denomination); a Methodist church
the civil rights movement
coauthor
the Communist Party (but Communist parties); the party; Communist(s); Communist countries; communism (as a system of thought, as in "the communism of the early Christians") or Communism (as the name of an international political movement, as in "during the cold war, the United States government sought to prevent the spread of Communism")
cutting-edge research; on the cutting edge
the Dalai Lama (traditionally capitalized), but previous dalai lamas
decision making; a decision-making body
e-mail
the East, eastern, an easterner, the East Coast (referring to the eastern U.S.); the East, the Far East, Eastern (referring to the Orient and Asian culture); eastern Europe, but Eastern Europe when referring to the post-WWII division of Europe
the equal rights amendment (U.S., unratified); ERA
fall (season)
federal; the federal government; federal agencies
Greater London
a half hour; a half-hour session
a historical study; an heir (use "a" before a pronounced "h")
a history course (lowercase academic subjects unless they are part of a department name or an official course name or are themselves proper nouns, such as Latin)
the Ice Age, but the information age (capitalize prehistoric cultural periods but not analogous terms for modern periods)
interdisciplinary
the Internet; the Net
Interstate 80; I-80; the interstate
a jack-of-all-trades (such familiar phrases are usually hyphenated), but a flash in the pan
John A. Doe Jr.; John A. Doe III (no commas)
L. A. Lane (period and space after initials); LBJ (no period or space when whole name abbreviated)
a master's degree; M.A.'s and Ph.D.'s
medieval village
metalanguage
the minister; the Reverend Shirley Stoops
midcentury; the mid-twentieth century
the Middle Ages
the middle class; a middle-class neighborhood
Miranda v. Arizona; the Miranda case
New York City; the city of New York
the nineteenth century; nineteenth-century history; early nineteenth-century history
nonviolent
North Africa, North African countries, in northern Africa
one-half (noun and adjective)
online
the Pacific Ocean; the Pacific and Atlantic oceans
on pages 1-35
parents-in-law
Parliament; parliamentary; the British parliament
policymaking
the pope; Pope John Paul II
postmodernism
premodern
President Lincoln; the president
prewar
the professor; Kriste Lindenmeyer, professor of history; Professor Lindenmeyer
the Progressive Era
Qur'an; Qur'anic (or Koran; Koranic)
the Republic of Indonesia; the republic
the Right; members of the right wing; right-winger(s); on the right
roman numerals; roman type
the sheikh; Sheikh Ibrahim el-Zak Zaky
so-called (adjective), a word or phrase preceded by so-called should not be placed in quotation marks
socioeconomic
the solar system
the South, southern, southerner, but Southern/Southerner in American Civil War contexts
southern Africa (referring to the southern part of the continent), but Southern California (considered a cultural entity)
ten- and twenty-year intervals
the third world
transatlantic; trans-American
the twenty-first century
the United States Postal Service; the postal service; the post office
the University of Chicago; the university; the University of Chicago and Harvard University; Northwestern and Princeton universities; the University of Wisconsin-Madison
Washington, DC
a well-known person; he is well known; a widely known critic (no hyphen after adverb ending in "ly" within compound modifier)
the West, western, a westerner; Western (referring to theu culture of the Occident, or Europe and the Western Hemisphere)
the World Wide Web; the Web; a Web site; a Web page
worldwide; Warsaw-wide