Finding Children's Books in Felician University Libraries
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The Rare Books and Special Collections Library at McGill University contains over nine hundred British and American chapbooks published in the 18th and 19th centuries. Through a generous donation from the Harold Crabtree Foundation, digital facsimiles have been prepared and a virtual collection created.
The McGill Library’s Chapbook Collection is organized by subject categories which can be browsed. The entire work can be read in PDF format or online, using the page-turning functionality of the Internet Archive.
"Street Print: A Brief History of English Chapbooks" provides background reading on chapbooks published in Great Britain. This collection of essays was prepared by the Interacting with Print Research Group.
Essays:
Read the Chapbook project blog for updates about this website and information about new titles added.
"Growing Up is Awfuler than All the Awful things that Ever Were" excerpt from "Stress" episode of Radiolab.
Webster, M., & Abumrad, J. (Hosts). (2008, April 9). Stress [Audio podcast episode]. In Radiolab. WNYC Studios. https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolab/episodes/91580-stress
"We now know that too much stress makes you sick. Fifty years ago, we had no idea. Credit an upholsterer, a chair, and some lab rats. Dr. Paul J. Rosch, President of the American Institute of Stress, describes a series of not so nice things he and his colleagues did to rodents which began to illuminate what it means to be "stressed out." Dr. Robert Sapolsky takes us to the edges of our seats, literally, as he explains the discovery of Type A personality, and why being a Type A person is worse for you then smoking. Speaking of chairs, upholsterer Charles Young helps us smooth our wrinkles. And we conclude this segment with a trip to one of the truly bizarre outposts of medicine - stressed dwafism - and story of a much beloved author caught in a body that never grew up."