Product Details
How to Do Everything with Your Genealogy

How to Do Everything with Your Genealogy
By George G. Morgan

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Product Description

Anyone interested in discovering their family genealogy should carry a copy of this book everywhere. Written by internationally recognized expert, George G. Morgan, this book is an irreplaceable resource for beginner to expert knowledge gatherers. Not only does Morgan explain how to get the search started – creating a family tree, locating and evaluating documents, selecting the appropriate hardware and software for the search – he goes steps further and dedicates an entire section to research methods and strategies where he discusses, among other topics, getting past “dead ends,” and organizing possible research travel.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #216373 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-03-18
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 512 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
This book pretty much covers it all … is an excellent, well-written resource... A great addition to any genealogy bookshelf! -- About.com/Genealogy

From the Back Cover

Trace your family roots back many generations with help from this easy-to-use guide. Learn to set up a family tree, locate and evaluate vital records, select the appropriate hardware and software for the search, make the most of the Internet, and much more. Inside, you’ll find invaluable research strategies, advice on getting past “brick walls,” and information on the latest print and online genealogical resources. Explore your family history--you never know what you might discover.

  • Select the appropriate family tree format
  • Create source citations for your data
  • Locate vital records and create ancestor profiles
  • Trace census, immigration, church, cemetery, and other records in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.
  • Conduct effective searches in libraries and archives and their online catalogs
  • Take advantage of all the resources available on the Internet
  • Plan a very successful research trip
  • Select hardware and software, including a genealogical database program
  • Share your findings with other family members--near and far

About the author: George G. Morgan is the internationally recognized author of the award-winning weekly online column, “Along Those Lines…”, for Ancestry.com, and the author of several genealogy books and countless articles about genealogy in publications around the world. He is president of the International Society of Family History Writers and Editors (ISFHWE), and operates Aha! Seminars, Inc., which conducts seminars for librarians and genealogical researchers.

About the Author
GEORGE G. MORGAN (Odessa, FL) is an internationally recognized expert in the field of genealogy and a widely published author of books, magazines, and journal articles.


Customer Reviews

Wonderful Resource for Genealogy Beginners AND Experienced!5
George Morgan has done it again! This book describes everything a genealogist needs to know about what to actually do to get the information and then what to do with it when you think you have enough information. Easy to read and very user friendly!

comprehensive but tedious reference3
This book is certainly comprehensive... it covers the expected range of genealogy topics, from vital records to selecting technology tools and planning a genealogy research trip.

But, for all the value that thorough and linear thinking has in the field of genealogy research, Morgan's writing style is unnecessarily tedious. For example, when talking about pedigree charts, he describes how you write your own name on line number one, then actually goes out of the way to explain to us that "the next pair of lines is numbered 2 and 3" before describing to us what these next lines are all about. And though he does devote some text to technology, this is discussed mostly in separate chapters at the end and he fails to incorporate as a central theme the role technology can play in alleviating the tedium of research.

In short, this book could have been written in half as many pages without losing much on substance. It's definitely not the kind of book you can read from cover-to-cover, even chapter-by-chapter. I found the Genealogy Handbook by Ellen Galford to be a much better starting point. However, given the comprehensiveness of this book and its decent index, this book still maintains some value as a reference.

How to Do Everything with Your Genealogy5
I am so pleased with this book!. It gives the genealogist concrete information on research, organizing and presenting your work. Personal examples are very helpful. I wouls recommend this book to any family historian.