Book history online
Based on the Annual Bibliography of the History of the Printed Book and Libraries (ABHB), and produced under the auspices of the Rare Books and Manuscripts Section of the International Federation of Library Associations. The site indexes printed materials on book production, the publishing industry, the book trade, book collecting, bibliography, and librarianship, all focusing on historical, bibliographical, and cultural aspects of the book. |
Catalogue of Digitized Medieval Manuscripts
This site provides a unified search tool for digitized collections of medieval manuscripts by linking to over 1,000 manuscripts from collections in Europe, Australia, North America and Japan. |
Collection Development for Academic Nursing Collections
A compilation of resources in print, nonprint and electronic formats prepared for librarians and teaching faculty.
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DOAJ: directory of open access journals
This site is a directory of open access journals and offers access to over 2,000 titles and 91,000 articles. More than a quarter of the journals can be searched at the article level. |
Map collections: American memory
This site is from the Geography and Map Division of the Library of Congress and is part of its American Memory project. |
National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections - Library of Congress:
The NUCMC Web site was designed to enable input of new records, but also provides searchable access to the collection records already digitized, and permits searching of RLG and OCLC records without charge, via links.
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The Online books page
This resource indexes individual titles and collections of English language online books and serials that are legally available, for free, in stable environments and standard, non-proprietary formats. Also includes news and feature items that relate to digitization projects and links to entire collections and archives.
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Perdita Manuscripts
This site contains digitized manuscripts from archives and libraries in the United States and the UK of early British women authors who were lost (hence "perdita') because they only exist in manuscript form. |