You have a whole line. UFOS, music, postcards..It could be monthly boxes from the GE universe. I really liked the Whole Library Handbook series. They should be digitized.
Hey Kathleen, I finally found you on a comment at Glenn Greenwald's substack forum!!!
My computer crashed in November, I went out and bought a new one immediately, but have had to wait to find friends comments on GG to get back ahold of friends there.
I have mixed feelings about this enterprise. I guess it is useful to have individual pages scattered in different collections around the world, and yet, I don't much like the idea of destroying beautiful books and making them into art projects instead of the devotional books they were intended to be. I wonder what the monks who worked on them would think of this.
O, me, too. When I looked up Ege in WorldCat I found a lot of entries for individual leaves. Perhaps at the time it was the only way smaller universities could afford, but still was an interesting approach. I don't like book breaking, either.
Maybe I should do this with The Whole Library Handbook? Sales have dropped off.
You have a whole line. UFOS, music, postcards..It could be monthly boxes from the GE universe. I really liked the Whole Library Handbook series. They should be digitized.
I continue to checkout the World Encyclopedia of Music Genres often, https://substack.com/profile/39182665-george-eberhart
Hey Kathleen, I finally found you on a comment at Glenn Greenwald's substack forum!!!
My computer crashed in November, I went out and bought a new one immediately, but have had to wait to find friends comments on GG to get back ahold of friends there.
Here is my Substack address:
https://williamw.substack.com/p/mad-scientist-rule-the-world
My email is whittw47@gmail,com
I am glad I found you again!
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I have mixed feelings about this enterprise. I guess it is useful to have individual pages scattered in different collections around the world, and yet, I don't much like the idea of destroying beautiful books and making them into art projects instead of the devotional books they were intended to be. I wonder what the monks who worked on them would think of this.
O, me, too. When I looked up Ege in WorldCat I found a lot of entries for individual leaves. Perhaps at the time it was the only way smaller universities could afford, but still was an interesting approach. I don't like book breaking, either.
Fascinating