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The Carcanet Collection

The Exact Editions platform is now working with book publishers to license collections of books as digital resources for universities, colleges, schools and other institutional libraries. Carcanet has been one of the leading English language publishers of this generation and the Carcanet Collection has just been launched as an annual subscription resource. The collection starts with 70 titles and will grow to over 100 in the course of 2017. Institutions that subscribe will have multi-user, site wide access to all … Keep Reading

Promoting by free access

For the second month we are working with Carcanet to promote their wonderful poetry list by providing temporary free access to ten of their new books, throughout November. These are all for sale as perpetual access resources from Exact Editions, along with 60 other titles.

Exact Editions is able to provide publishers with an opportunity to make titles freely available for a limited period, because the platform provides users with access to a service. The technology is not driven … Keep Reading

Carcanet poetry in November

Ten poetry books from Carcanet are available for free reading and evaluation through the Exact Editions web site for the month of November.

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The list comprises:

The Alexandra Sequence — John Redmond

Beyond the Barbed Wire: Selected Poems — Abdellatif Laabi

Dirt — William Letford

John Masefield — Muriel Spark

The Met Office Advises Caution — Rebecca Watts

Playing the Octopus — Mary O’Malley

Quennets — Philip Terry

What Must Happen — Jeffrey Wainwright

The Windows of Graceland — Martina

Keep Reading

Current Publishing Release 3 New Digital Titles

Current Publishing has released three new titles – Current Archaeology, Current World Archaeology, and Military History Monthly– each with a full digital archive.

Current Archaeology is the oldest of the three titles, with its archive dating all the way back to March 1967. Although it is now the UK’s leading (and best-selling) archaeology magazine, Issue 1 of the magazine was mailed free of charge to university academics and archaeologists! Readers began to subscribe from Issue 2, and … Keep Reading

Institutions as a market for digital magazines

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The earliest issues of the magazine Geographical

available at https://institutions.exacteditions.com/geographical

Consumer magazines are a primary form of social history. For much of the 19th century, and especially the 20th century, consumer magazines became the most widespread and the most vivid form of popular culture. From the high end elite magazines Scientific American, Vogue, Punch to the merely but gloriously popular mass market Ladies Home Journal, Hello or Readers Digest, these titles — and many more — Keep Reading

Page 32 of 161

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