September
21, 2006
The very best way to be sure the materials
you are using are truly public domain is to go right to the
original published book. But finding an original source book
can be quite difficult. Alibris makes it much easier.
What is Alibris?
In their own words:
"Alibris connects people who love books,
music and movies to thousands of independent sellers around
the world. Our proprietary technology and advanced logistics
allow us to offer over 30 million used, new and hard-to-find
titles to consumers, libraries and other institutions."
Basically if you know Amazon, you understand
Alibris. The crucial difference is that Alibris allows you to
do searches based on publication date and that makes it very
valuable indeed.
How to search.
To start a search, you want to go to
the Advanced Search page. Just to to alibris.com and click on
their advanced search button right where it says books. It is
located right below the basic search in the left hand corner
of the home page.
This brings you to a page with many
input options. In addition to the standard title, keyword, etc.
inputs is one very valuable input near the bottom of the form.
It is called Publication Year - and one of its options is labeled
Before. And that is very powerful.
Lets say you were looking for a book
on baseball that was in the public domain. Put the word baseball
in the title and in the publication date/before field put 1923.
This particular research pulled up over
200 possible books that you have the opportunity to purchase
and turn into a product.
A word of warning
The search results are only as good
as the data input by the sellers. This means that a certain
percentage of books will not match your search terms and a certain
number of dates will be wrong - specifically I see lots of books
with a publication date of 1900 which is clearly wrong. (I'm
guessing that 1900 is the default if no date is entered.)
Therefore, before purchasing a book,
it is generally a good idea to send a note to the particular
seller to verify the publication date before investing money
in the book.
While I would much prefer seeing the
book before making a purchase to verify that it meets my needs,
if the price is reasonable enough, I figure it is just part
of the cost of researching for the product.
Oh, and this is also a good way to search
for available books published after 1922 that are in the public
domain. For instance if you are looking at doing a diet related
product, you could search for books say before 1960 and then
when you find books with interesting titles, you can then do
a copyright search as discussed in another article on this site
(link at end) to see if the book fell into the public domain.
And who knows, this could result in finding a diamond in the
rough. In fact, at least for diet books, there have been several
bestsellers in recent years based on either a public domain
book or a government publication.
Good luck with your searching.
Steven Chabotte is the webmaster of
The Historical Archive and
My
City Travel Guide and a student of the traits of success.
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