Hello, Welcome to this last reflection in the mini-series on the basic elements of an index! Over the last three months I’ve discussed entries and arrays, main headings and subheadings, locators, cross-references, and format. Today I look at sorting. Sorting and format are like twins. They both have to do with how the index is arranged. But whereas format is more about the visual aspect of the index—how the index appears on the page—sorting is about how entries and arrays are arranged one after the other. As I like to emphasize, indexes need to be easy to use in order to be effective. This also applies to sorting. Arrays and entries need to be organized in a way that meets the reader’s expectations, so that the reader can seamlessly being searching. For the most part, this means alphabetical sort. The index begins with A and ends with Z. This applies to main headings, stacking arrays one after the other. This also applies to sorting subheadings within an array. The alternative to alphabetical sort is to leave entries unsorted, either in the order in which they are written or randomly thrown together. Either way, with no discernible pattern, the index would be very difficult to search. Alternatively, the index could be organized in page order (I’ve occasionally seen subheadings arranged in page order), but page order is not quick to scan and and the reader may just as well flip through the book. So, alphabetical sort has emerged as the universal standard for all languages which use an alphabet. A few pointers on sorting:
Sorting is about how arrays and entries—main headings and subheadings—are organized. Ideally, the sorting simply works and readers don’t really notice because they are too busy searching. Alphabetical sort is either letter-by-letter or word-by-word. Word-by-word is CMS’s current recommendation. Whichever you choose, be consistent. This wraps up my mini-series on the basic elements of an index. Thank you for reading! In May, I will begin taking a look at some of the finer points of indexing. I'm looking forward to it. Yours in indexing, Stephen |
2x award-winning book indexer and the author of Book Indexing: A Step-by-Step Guide. I teach you how to write excellent indexes, along with reflections on succeeding as a freelance indexer.
Hello, I am back home and catching up on sleep after attending the Indexing Society of Canada/Société canadienne d’indexation (ISC/SCI)’s annual conference, held this year at the University of British Columbia (UBC), in Vancouver. I enjoy attending the Canadian conferences. Being Canadian myself, ISC/SCI feels like “my” society in a way that the American Society for Indexing (ASI) doesn’t, even though I am currently a member of both and ASI has a lot to offer too. It is a treat to see and...
Hello, I’ve been freelancing for almost thirteen years now, and I feel like I am at another juncture at which I am reassessing my business and contemplating how best to move forward. I periodically find myself here. This is partly driven by external factors, often the need to earn a little more due to changing financial needs. I’m no longer the twenty-something kid I was when I first began freelancing, renting a small room in a dilapidated former convent and cruising around Vancouver on my...
Hello, Thank you to all of you who replied to my brief survey on whether or not to create an audio version of Book Indexing: A Step-by-Step Guide. Your responses have been very helpful. So far the response is overwhelmingly, though not quite 100%, against an audio version, and for many of the reasons that I’ve been hesitant so far. Specifically, that it can be difficult to focus and follow along when listening to nonfiction (compared to fiction), and that being able to see the indexing...