We’ve recently added more than ten thousand freely readable recent books from academic publishers to the extended shelves of The Online Books Page. These online titles are provided by JSTOR’s Open Access Books collection, and represent the first large-scale automated inclusion of new monographs to our catalog. We’ll be updating the listings from this collection on a regular basis. (Most of our extended shelves imports, which also include collections like HathiTrust, Project Gutenberg, and the Directory of Open Access Journals, get refreshed about once a month.)
We’ll also continue to add individual recent academic books of interest, both from that collection and others, to our curated collection. (You’ll see individually-chosen additions in our new books listing.) Automated addition of JSTOR’s open access books will let us include many more new titles than we’d be able to do manually by ourselves. They’ll help our site’s readers find up to date information from experts on many subjects, complementing the historical sources and other older books also available in our catalog. (As always, I recommend that information seekers also consult their local libraries to get a fuller understanding of the subjects our collection covers, since local libraries have many copyrighted books we can’t offer for free reading on The Online Books Page. But we now also have a growing number of recent books you’re not likely to find, or obtain as easily, in your local library.)
A growing number of academic and peer-reviewed monographs and edited volumes are now available through open access. The Directory of Open Access Books now lists over 90,000 of them, and the related OAPEN site offers direct downloads of many such books as well, as do many individual publisher sites. We may expand our automated listings in the future to cover a wider array of open access academic titles. But I consider JSTOR’s collection to be a good starting point for automated imports, both because it includes over 140 high-quality publishers, and because it provides high-quality metadata. That makes it relatively easy to integrate their offerings with the other books in our catalog, using similar author and subject headings, and avoiding redundant listings. As always, our “extended shelves” imports are subject to change and not guaranteed to be as persistent as the “curated collection” listings we catalog ourselves. But you can always request that we add specific titles you’re interested in to our curated collection, whether from JSTOR’s offerings or elsewhere.
JSTOR has a growing collection of information resources that are freely and openly available to all readers (as well as resources they offer by subscription or by registered access). Along with JSTOR’s open access books, we also link to issues of many of the serials JSTOR offers, sometimes via JSTOR’s own Early Journal Content offerings, sometimes via other online providers. We’re also continuing to document the public domain status of serials from JSTOR and other providers in our Deep Backfile knowledge base, (You can use the “Contact us” links in our Deep Backfile tables to let us know about particular serials you’re interested in, or for which you have information that we could use.)
My thanks to JSTOR, and to a growing number of publishers and authors, for making current scholarship freely available and discoverable!
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