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| Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia: Fourth Edition, Revised (Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia) | 
enlarge | Author: Tom Stevenson Publisher: DK ADULT Category: Book
List Price: $50.00 Buy New: $27.40 You Save: $22.60 (45%)
New (29) Used (7) from $26.44
Avg. Customer Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 10751
Media: Hardcover Edition: 4 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 664 Shipping Weight (lbs): 5.6 Dimensions (in): 11 x 8.3 x 1.7
ISBN: 0756631645 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.2203 EAN: 9780756631642 ASIN: 0756631645
Publication Date: November 19, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
wide but superficial August 10, 2003 34 out of 42 found this review helpful
I'm a professional of wine working in Shanghai. I purchased this book in Amazon after the advise of a friend. I found the book to be interesting and a complete work, but I think his view sometimes lacks actuality. Although the author's mastery in wine tasting is out of discussion, his presentation of tasting is outdated: nowadays nobody can asses the origin of a wine just by tasting: the examples the author proposes are valid just in a ideal world without Australian Shiraz-Mourvedre, South African Cabernet-Merlot or Californian Zinfandel (otherwise rightly commented in his book). I can't help but bring here the review of "Toro" wine growing area. The author dispatches this area with few words, the last of them to tell us "among the many dirty cellars I have seen in my life, this one in Toro is the filthiest". This is the only comment he makes about wine cellars on that area. I bought also "The Oxford Companion to Wine" and Robert Parker's sixth edition of Wine buyer's guide. In "The Oxford Companion to Wine", edited by Jancis Robinson, in this region "a small number of producers have fostered a move away from the heavy, bulk reds of recent times, notably Manuel Farina, Vega Sauco and Frutos Villar". Concise and accurate, like all the rest in this excellent book. Mr. Parker has tasted the wines more carefully: this region" has adopted modern technology, and the results have been some rich, full-bodied, deeply flavoured, southern Rhone-like wine from wineries like Farina. They taste similar to the big, lush, peppery wines of France's Chateauneuf-du-Pape and Gigondas, and they represent astonishing values..." He found one of the wines produced there to be outstanding, and several others to be good. Nobody would expect from a wine taster to have the last news from every piece of vineyard on the world, but the word from such a well-known, reputable professional is too heavy to be delivered so lightly.
New Guide is Not So New August 13, 2002 23 out of 25 found this review helpful
I bought the 1997 (or brown covered) encyclopedia a few years back (which I love by the way) and decided to purchase the updated version to find new and updated information such as new wineries or ones that were upcoming and warranted coverage in the new book. I am so dissapointed. The only change I could find is a box containing information on wine quality from 1997 to 2000. Tom Stevenson didn't even change one word in his cover letter! Even the page numbers in each book have the same information! The winery ratings didn't change - or not from what I could tell. Unless I can actually see what's inside the next version, I will never purchase an version again. If you own an earlier version, do not purchase this book - it's a waste of money.
I rated it 2 stars, not because of the content, but because it is not updated as the cover indicates (see red circle). I do however question just how much Tom Stevenson puts into research with each book edition if nothing c
A great reference and coffee table book February 25, 2002 2 out of 9 found this review helpful
This book is of general interest to the wine enthusiast. It is well presented and interesting to read. At the same time it functions as a reference guide. An excellent buy.
Best single-volume general wine reference I know of November 6, 2001 64 out of 78 found this review helpful
In the "wine-drinking" countries (which excludes the US, by about a factor of 10 per capita), a knowledge of wine at the casual level is pretty widespread. When people want to know more, they turn to an expert. This is typically someone who has spent his or her life in some part of the wine trade and therefore whose livelihood has depended on ability to satisfy, and accurately advise, customers. There are even highly respected standards such as the British Master of Wine examination that will establish whether a person genuinely knows the subject and can also smell and taste all of the nuances that he claims to. (The MW exam is notoriously revealing and would undoubtedly depopulate overnight the ranks of the self-appointed US wine pundits, which may be why many of them pointedly avoid reference to it.) In the US, which lacks most of these traditions, any musician or sportswriter or lawyer can claim to be a wine expert and there's a fair chance they'd get a Following, self-perpetuating on the basis of popularity.Fortunately in the US, relying on such writers is not (yet) compulsory. It is possible to get books by English-language writers of very high caliber and experience, who mostly are in other countries (such as Clive Coates, Serena Sutcliffe, Remington Norman, and Michael Broadbent). Stevenson comes from this tradition, and although his book is not as specialized as those of the other authors I've just named, it is compensatingly broad. There is a desperate need for accessible one-volume introductory wine books. Blake Ozias's "All About Wine" served this need in the US, 25 or 35 years ago, but it is badly out of date (not to mention out of print); it was a thin book you could absorb in a few evenings. Stevenson's is different, it is a genuine encyclopedia, combining succinct overviews of all kinds of wine-making regions (including Texas and Mexico) with further depth on producers and labels in the larger regions. The compact snapshot on Beaujolais, for example, is superb, first laying out the history and styles, then illustrating many producers that you will in fact encounter in the shops. It distinguishes the deep, complex wines that the region can make from the bubble-gum style that has become more common recently. More generally, if you found a random bottle of wine that you were interested in, there is a decent chance you could look it up in Stevenson and learn much more. This is the best single-volume general wine reference I'm currently aware of. I have recommended it to several people who wanted to learn more about wine and all of them have been very satisfied.
Best reference in wine September 14, 2001 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book is the ultimate, in wine appellation references. It covers law and grape varietals very well. The only place it lacks is any reference to the grapes grown for spirits. If you have only two books with which to study for the sommelier exam, this should be one. (the other is: Sales and Service for the Wine Profesional. by Brian Julyan)
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