Scarecrow Press
Pages: 446
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-8108-7823-5 • Hardback • November 2013 • $197.00 • (£152.00)
978-0-8108-7969-0 • eBook • November 2013 • $187.00 • (£144.00)
Mohamed Saliou Camara is the author of this fifth edition. Born and educated in Guinea, he studied at the Gamel Abdel Nasser University of Conakry as well as abroad, and worked in Guinea for the Press Bureau of the Presidency, the National Radio Television Network of Guinea, and also taught at his alma mater. He is presently a professor of history at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida. He has written numerous articles and four books on Guinea.
Thomas E. O’Toole wrote the first three editions and co-wrote the fourth. He first visited Guinea as a Fulbright student in 1963 and returned thereafter. He has been teaching about Africa, including history, anthropology and sociology ever since 1968, this at the University of Minnesota, St. Cloud State University, and presently Metropolitan State University in St. Paul. He has written many articles and several books on Africa.
Janice E. Baker, who co-authored the fourth edition, went to Guinea as a Peace Corps Volunteer teacher and has worked for the Congressional Research Service and President Jimmy Carter’s Commission on World Hunger.
It has been a 9 years now since the 4th edition of this title was published, and Dr. O’Toole continues his long authorship of this work. For this edition he is joined by Camara, a Guinea native and professor of history at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida, and Baker, a retired public servant who has written on Africa. As with many Third World nations, there is more information available for the turbulent post-1945 period, while the earlier eras suffer in comparison. The dictionary’s information has been revised and updated to reflect the changes in the last 10 years, and there are now over 800 alphabetically arranged entries—twice as many as published in the last edition. A chronology (3500 B.C.E. - 2013 C.E.) supplements the introduction that briefly describes the land and people, the pre-colonial history, and the more recent period since 1984 . . . [T]here are see references, and plentiful cross-references embedded within the text are identified by their heavy black print. The value-added features include a list of acronyms and abbreviations, and lists of government officials (e.g., presidents, prime ministers, governors). The lengthy bibliography is important as it provides a selection of citations to European and African materials not easily found elsewhere. . . .[T]here really are very few reference books on this poor West African country. This item is necessary for all African collections, and suitable for all other academic and large public library reference collections.
— American Reference Books Annual