Public domain treasures -- now available for downloading

Wednesday, August 30, 2006 at 9:55 AM



We've often highlighted oldies but goodies on this blog -- Aesop's fables, Shakespeare's plays, Richardson's novels -- so we're thrilled to share the news that starting today, you can freely download, print and save out-of-copyright titles to read at your own pace.

You'll find everything from classic novels to ancient philosophical texts, to any number of practical or creative works that have entered the public domain since the earliest days of the printed word.

To easily locate public domain titles you can download in full, simply select the "Full view" radio button on Google Book Search, then click the new "Download" button that now appears on out-of-copyright titles.

(Please note that we do not enable downloading of any books currently under copyright. Unless we have the publisher’s permission to show more, we display only small snippets of text –- at most, two or three sentences surrounding your search term -– to help you determine if you’ve found what you’re looking for.) Read the full post 0 comments

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Now you can add Google Book Search to your site

Tuesday, August 29, 2006 at 6:00 PM



We've heard from book lovers and Google Book Search fans looking for a way to give their websites the power of Book Search. Now you can do it -- just by copying and pasting a few simple lines of code.

Google Book Search


Whether you're a book blogger, a librarian or simply want to help people who visit your site find more useful information, you can add a Google Book Search box like this one to your site for free. Just visit this page, where you'll find simple step-by-step instructions. Read the full post 0 comments

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Finding the gems in your library

Thursday, August 24, 2006 at 10:51 AM



The universe of books is much larger than most of us can imagine, but the book you need might be right in your local library. That's why we're excited to announce the launch of a new Google Book Search feature aimed at making it easier for readers everywhere to discover the hidden gems in libraries around the world: Library Catalog Search.

If it looks like we may not have the book that best matches your search query in our index, you'll now see library catalog results appear at the bottom of the search results page. These results come from a search of library catalog information from libraries around the globe (over 15 union catalogs representing holdings from over 30 countries). You can also choose to conduct searches across these library catalog holdings by selecting the Library Catalog radio button on the Advanced Search page. Read the full post 0 comments

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Authors@Google

Monday, August 21, 2006 at 9:49 AM



There are book lovers everywhere at Google, not just on the Book Search team. In fact, a diverse group of Googlers -- from engineering, product management, marketing, operations and recruiting -- regularly volunteers to arrange author visits to the Google campus, inviting them to discuss their latest works and ideas. We affectionately call it Authors@Google, and it has been so popular at our Mountain View headquarters that we’ve expanded it to our New York and Santa Monica offices.

But Authors@Google isn’t just for Googlers. With the help of Google Video, we're able to share many of these events with book lovers around the world. Interested in hearing thoughts from Seth Godin or John Battelle? Curious about what Nobel Prize winner Dr. James Watson has been studying recently? These authors and many others are just a few clicks away. Take a look at the current list of videos, and be sure to check back, too -- we're always adding more. Read the full post 0 comments

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In search of the first true novel

Friday, August 18, 2006 at 4:36 PM



We recently shared an email from a hard-working graduate student who told us about how she's using Google Book Search for research. The story brought me back to my own grad school days, when I first became acquainted with the work of 18th-century author Samuel Richardson. I was obsessed with finding out who wrote the first English novel -- an interest no doubt strengthened by the fact that the question was as far as humanly possible from the topic of my dissertation. :-)

In hot pursuit of the birth of the novel, I read John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress* and Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe. Neither of them felt like a true novel. In my opinion, a novel should have real characters engaged in complex human interactions. Then I discovered Richardson's Pamela, in this paperback edition. Here, at last, was what I was looking for: a story about people and their relationships.

Next came Richardson's Clarissa (vols. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8). I read it as an e-text through Literature Online, to which my university had a subscription. I chose to read the last and longest unabridged edition, because I didn't want the text filtered by an editor. Like Austin Dobson, I felt instinctively that "Any retrenchment must be mutilation." In retrospect, the novel is repetitious until Clarissa's departure from home, but after that -- what a story of two real, flawed people! Lovelace, rather than being a caricature of a villain, vacillates believably between glee, remorse and obduracy. Clarissa has very little power over her destiny in her society and situation, yet regardless of that, she never gives in.

Finally, I read the e-text of Richardson's Sir Charles Grandison (vols. 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7). It was a pleasant read, but with one problem: Sir Charles is too perfect.

Interestingly, I finished reading Clarissa as ASCII text (for convenience) before I learned that Richardson's italics and footnotes -- missing in the ASCII version -- are a significant element of the text. So I'm happy to see that with Google Book Search, today's grad students -- and anyone else who feels like it -- can not only find and search the full text of Clarissa, they can also explore the lively critical discourse it has inspired.

*Copyright rules differ between countries, so the books we link to in this post may not be in the public domain everywhere in the world. Where copyright status is in question, the book will not appear in Full View. We hope you bear with us as we confirm the status and, whenever appropriate, change the display. Read the full post 0 comments

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To boldly go...

Thursday, August 17, 2006 at 10:00 AM

When I was a little girl, I used to watch Star Trek (the original) with my parents. Sometimes, when asked if I’m a trekkie, I say “I was born of trekkies” -- although, to be honest, I'm actually a big fan myself. I often have random memories of episodes -- my favorite, of course, is the The Trouble with Tribbles (I bought cute little toy tribbles for my whole family one Christmas – they really do purr when you’re not paying attention to them). I like the movies, too. I remember laughing as Chekov explained he was looking for “nuclear wessels,” and crying when Spock said “the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few...or the one.”

And while I went into marketing, my sister got her Ph.D. in astrophysics, spent time working at SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) and is now a research scientist who helps maintain and study the images that the Chandra telescope sends back from its orbit around Earth (for the rest of us: she’s searching for black holes).

That’s why I'm excited about the 40th anniversary of the original episode. (Yep – older than me. We were already watching re-runs when I was little.) Google is having some fun with this as well -- as you might imagine, we have quite a few trekkies here. We're on hand at the 5th Annual Official Star Trek Convention in Las Vegas this week demonstrating some of our products, including Google Desktop, SketchUp and a new one that allows people to see intergalactic creations right on their mobile phones.

When I heard about the convention, I started to think about how Google Book Search can help all of these trekkies -- or anyone! -- discover fun books about Star Trek. Of course there are the biographies, and books written by the actors. But what’s really interesting is looking at the influence Star Trek has had on literature. Who knew so many books quote Spock’s famous line from the movie? There's even a whole literary tradition of subtle references to Dr. McCoy’s famous refrain, “Jim, I’m a doctor, not a xxx.”

Try plugging in your favorite lines to see where they show up. It’s really pretty amazing to see how influential this show is. Read the full post 0 comments

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Tales from the crib

Monday, August 14, 2006 at 3:01 PM



I'm one of those people who turns to books in times of stress. When my first child was born, I read a dozen books on every possible parenting challenge -- teething, crying, sleeping, diaper rash, etc., etc., etc. By the time my husband and I decided we were ready to have a second, I felt like I not only knew what to expect, but had become a full-fledged baby expert. I was ready for anything.

Then, of course, I found out I was having twins. Back to the books!

This time, I tried searching on Google Book Search, and I found some great new books with practical advice for raising twins. But I also found some fascinating older books, like this one from 1905, which examines the nature versus nurture issue before the official discovery of genes (the word "gene" wasn't coined until 1909). This more modern title from the American Philosophical Society explores the IQ and personality similarities among identical and fraternal twins raised in different families. But my favorite find is this book, in which Charles Darwin, writing a letter to his half-cousin Francis Galton in 1875, gives his two cents on the twin phenomenon:
Nothing seems to me more curious than the similarity and dissimilarity of twins.
I must say I'm kind of curious about that myself.

If you're looking for books on a particular subject, give Book Search a whirl. Since we're always adding new books from every era, you might find all kinds of fascinating stuff you don't expect...even if you're not expecting. Read the full post 0 comments

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Cite-seeing with Google Book Search

Thursday, August 10, 2006 at 2:27 PM



Google Book Search presents an exciting possibility for researchers of every kind: since each page of each book has its own unique URL, it's easy to share direct citations to individual pages.

Not long ago we told you about how one person, Bernie Robichau, searched for his last name and found details about his family history. But he's hardly alone; there are groups of people investigating their shared ancestry, unearthing and documenting pieces of history they've discovered in books.

One cool example is Alabama Genealogy in Color, a blog written by a group of "family history researchers with African American Alabama ancestry" to share the "triumphs and trials" of their personal research. Check out this post from July 19th to see how the group uses Google Book Search citations to point readers to particular pages in books. Read the full post 0 comments

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University of California libraries join Library Project

Wednesday, August 09, 2006 at 12:20 PM



I'm very happy to share some tremendous news: today we announced our partnership with the University of California libraries to digitize books in their collections and make them discoverable in Google Book Search (see the welcome message by the University of Michigan's John Wilkin on the main Google blog). This partnership is especially exciting because the UC system comprises more than 100 extraordinary research libraries housed at 10 campuses, representing a treasure trove of human knowledge that people everywhere will be able to search.

We're honored to welcome the University of California libraries to the Google Books Library Project. For more details on the partnership, you can read the UC press release, the UC Statement of Use and a brief statement on our Library Partners page explaining the UC libraries' vision and reasons for joining the project. Read the full post 0 comments

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The one about the chestnuts

Monday, August 07, 2006 at 2:17 PM


A Hare once made fun of a Tortoise.
"What a slow way you have!" he said. "How you creep along!"
"Do I?" said the Tortoise. "Try a race with me, and I will beat you."
"You only say that for fun." said the Hare. "But come! I will race with you."
You may remember how this story ends, or the one about the boy and the wolf, but how about "The Flies and the Pot of Honey," "The Fox that Lost his Tail," or "The Cat, the Monkey and the Chestnuts"?

Aesop, believed to have been a Greek slave who wrote in the 6th century B.C., penned these and many other fables that have been translated and printed countless times through the ages. This particular edition, published in relatively modern-day 1885, is part of the public domain in the United States, so readers in the U.S. can see every page in Full View* through Book Search. And because the full text of the book is searchable, Aesop enthusiasts can track down famous quotes, try searching for every reference to a word like "wolf" and crack open any old chestnuts they discover.

*Because copyright rules differ between countries, this book may not be in the public domain everywhere in the world. Where copyright status is in question, the book will not appear in Full View. We hope you bear with us as we confirm the status and, whenever appropriate, change the display. Read the full post 0 comments

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The dead man's hand

Wednesday, August 02, 2006 at 11:11 AM



One hundred and thirty years ago today, gunfighter Wild Bill was famously murdered by Crooked Nose Jack. That might sound like an episode of Deadwood -- the fourth episode of the first season, to be exact -- but the murder of James Butler Hickok by Jack McCall was, of course, fact before it became fiction.

Never one to let his guard down during a poker match, Hickok (Wild Bill) always sat with his back to the wall -- protecting himself from outlaws who might attack from behind. But on August 2, 1876, the seat in his preferred position wasn't available, and Hickok was facing the wall with his back to the door when he was shot in the head.

You can find details about the murder in an 1888 book, Our Pioneer Heroes and Their Daring Deeds. Legend has it that Hickok died clutching his poker hand: a pair of black aces and a pair of black eights. That part of the story is recounted in the Encyclopedia of Western Lawmen and Outlaws and elsewhere. Today, poker books like this one refer to this set of cards as the "Dead Man's Hand," and the gravestone of Charlie Henry Rich -- the dealer who dealt Hickok's famous last hand -- pays tribute accordingly.

If you ever find yourself en route to the real Deadwood, South Dakota, Frommer's Exploring America by RV can help you catch a reenactment of the shooting, as well as find Wild Bill's own gravesite at Mount Moriah Cemetery. (And if you're not planning a trip anytime soon, you can see a photo in Tombstones: 75 Famous People and Their Final Resting Places.) Read the full post 0 comments

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Time passages

Tuesday, August 01, 2006 at 8:49 AM



I'm brand new at Google, so I've been digging around on our site, exploring everything I can click on. Yesterday, I was talking with a few colleagues about the parallel universe hidden inside Google Book Search. Okay, okay -- so it's not really a parallel universe. But it struck me that by making so many older books discoverable online, we're building a sort of lens to the past.

In this 1841 book, for instance, you can see how the author, Roswell Park, envisioned organizing all human knowledge, through a system classifying "all of its branches, and illustrating their history, relations, uses and objects." (Interestingly, Park gives an estimate of the number of books in the world by 1816: two million total, with the number printed per year in America estimated at only 500.)

Skipping ahead to 1915, you can find a book about how to write for the movies -- back when the movie industry was so new, the word "movie" still merited quotation marks. The advice -- penned by none other than Louella Parsons, who was on her way toward becoming one of the first influential Hollywood gossip columnists -- is remarkably fresh:
Nearly everyone who goes to the picture shows night after night has some plot stored in his mind that he thinks would make a good photoplay, if he only knew how to properly construct the story! Ah, there's the rub! If only he knew how to put his story into a motion picture scenario! You may have a dozen clever, unique plots, but if you are ignorant of scenario construction your ideas are practically valueless.
Yikes.

If you're a history buff, student or just plain curious about the past, give Advanced Book Search a try, limiting your search to books published in a particular time period. You may be surprised by what you find. Read the full post 0 comments

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