Reference Books and Guides is an eclectic collection, both historic and current, from Hammurabi to the Internet, with 40 books, including Bartlett's Quotations, Emily Post's Etiquette, The CIA World Factbook, Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Robert's Rules of Order, Internet books by Richard Seltzer, and more. These are the types of books that you turn to when you have a particular question. You just check the part with the answer rather than reading them through from cover-to-cover.
Intended for use with PCs (Windows or Linux) and recent Macs (OS X), these books are in plain-text format, organized for easy access.
You can see the complete table of contents below. Please use the Find function in your browser (under Edit) to look for a specific author or book.
You can see
suggestions on how to get the most out of your plain-text books on CD ROM at our home Web site. Use the back button on your browser to return here.
Questions? If Richard Seltzer, who created this CD, is online now, you can chat with him immediately by clicking on his photo (below). If he is offline, you can send him an email by clicking on his photo.
Table of Contents
Quotations
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Familiar Quotations edited by John Bartlett
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Handy Dictionary of Poetical Quotations
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Many Thoughts of Many Minds -- a treasury of quotations compiled by Louis
Klopasch
Encyclopedias and Collections of Facts
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Burrough's Encyclopedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889
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Handy Cyclopedia of Things Worth Knowing
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The Nutall Encyclopedia edited by Rev. James Wood, 1907
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The 2007 CIA World Factbook. With maps, flags, and up-to-date information
on every country in the world this is an interlinked set of hundreds
of HTML documents. You should open it with your Web browser.
Thesaurus
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Roget's Thesaurus, 1911 edition
US Census
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A Historical Record of the Population of the United States, 1994
Practical Advice for Living
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Book of Wise Sayings, Selected Largely from Eastern Sources by W.A. Clouston
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The Eugenic Marriage: A Personal Guide to the New Science of Better Living
and Better Babies by W. Grant Hague
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Fowler's Household Helps
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Proverbs (from the King James Bible)
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Up-to-Date Business, edited by Seymour Eaton
Law
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The Oldest Code of Laws in the world by Hammurabi, King of Babylonia (2285-2242
BC)
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A Law Dictionary Adapted to the Constitution and Laws of the United States
of America and the Several States of the American Union by John Bouvier,
1856 (from The Constitution Society web site at http://www.constitution.org
Included here with permission.
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A
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B
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C
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D
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E
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F
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G
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H
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I
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J
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K
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L
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M
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N
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O
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P
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Q
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R
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S
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T
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U
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V
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W
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Y
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Constitution of the United States
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Constitution of Massachusetts
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Constitution of Virginia
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Constitution of Pennsylvania
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Constitution of New York
Codes of Conduct and Etiquette
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Book of Etiquette, volume 2, by Lillian Eichler
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The Code of Honor (for Dueling) by John Lyde Wilson
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Etiquette in Society, in Business, in Politics, and at Home by Emily Post
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George Washington's Rules of Civility by Moncure Conway
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Robert's Rules of Order by Major Henry M. Robert
Guides for Writing and Speaking
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Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases by Grenville Keiser
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How to Speak and Write Correctly by Joseph Devlin
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The Jest Book, selected and arranged by Mark Lemon
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Jokes for All Occasions
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Literary Blunders by Henry Wheatley
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Philosophy of Style by Herbert Spencer
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Practical Argumentation by George Pattee
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Slips of Speech by John Bechtel
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Stops or How to Punctuate by Paul Allardyce
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Stories that Words Tell Us by Elizabeth O'Neill
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Style by Walter Raleigh
How to Make Things
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The Boy Mechanic, volume 1, by Jack Mansfield
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Things to Make by Archibald Williams
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plain text
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pdf version, with illustrations
Internet Guides
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Quick Advice about Internet Business by Richard Seltzer
Take Charge of Your Web Site by Richad Seltzer (originally published
by MightyWords, 2001)
You need to get the most out of Web pages that are critical to your
business. You suspect that something is wrong—the results just aren't matching
expectations. You may be tempted to invest even more on design or on advertising
or on both (not realizing that the expensive design you already have could
be preventing people from finding your pages naturally). You feel out of
control. You don't understand your options, don't understand how details
of design can affect traffic. You may not even know what questions to ask.
Hence you don't know what to tell the experts to do. Here you'll find one
set of lessons that can help solve the problems of four kinds of business
people: 1.The independent professional with his or her own Web site.2.The
CEO or marketing manager for a startup or a small focused company. 3.The
manager or marketing manager of a department or group within a large, diverse
company. 4.The Internet technical expert suddenly given broader responsibility.
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Preface
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Introduction: My Web site was supposed to bring me new business. Help!
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Chapter 1: What you can do to fix your existing site
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Chapter 2: How to build free Web pages
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Chapter 3: How to publicize your Web site
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The Social Web: how to build a successful personal or business Web
site by Richard Seltzer (1997, 1998).
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From "Flypaper" to Social Web (preface)
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Let People Find You -- Putting "Flypaper" to Work (introduction)
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Basic Building Blocks of the Social Web (chapter 1)
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How to Design Web Pages Without Learning HTML (chapter 2)
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The Content Question -- Okay, I have Web space. Now what am I going to
put there? (chapter 3)
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Who Owns What? (chapter 4)
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How to Build a Personal Web Site -- the Broader Implications of Search
Engines (chapter 5)
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How to publicize your Web site over the Internet (chapter 6)
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Making your site global -- taking advantage of free translation at AltaVista
(chapter7)
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The Way of the Web lessons from the Internet -- how to adapt
to the new business environment by Richard Seltzer (1995).
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Epigraph -- "The Way of the Web"
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Will the Real Tomorrowland Please Step Forward?" (Introduction)
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The Giants Wore Velcro on their Shoulders (Chapter 1)
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Wake Up: Tomorrow Happened Yesterday (Chapter 2)
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What's the Razor and What's the Razor Blade (Chapter 3)
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Curious Technology (Chapter 4)
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Building Communities on the Internet (Chapter 5)
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And the Blind Shall Lead Them: New Ways to Perceive Cyberspace (Chapter
6)
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Anonymity for Fun and Deception: The Other Side of Community (Chapter 7)
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Identity, Motivation, and Community (Chapter 8)
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Shop Online the Lazy Way by Richard Seltzer (originally published by
Macmillan, 1999)
When the Lazy Way editors asked me to write a book about online shopping,
I jumped at the chance, because online "shopping" involves a variety of
tasks--not just clicking to well-known sites, throwing some items in a
"shopping cart," and making a credit card transaction. Online shopping
also involves auctions, newsgroups, chats, and forums. It involves making
your own Web pages, and selling items, as well as buying. Online Shopping
The Lazy Way is yet another way to spread the Internet "gospel"--that anyone
can become an active player, not just a passive consumer--that anyone can
learn to take advantage of the Internet's full power.
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IntroductionWhy shop Online?
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Part One covers aspects of online shopping that apply no matter what you
want to buy.
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Chapter One covers the basics -- how to find your way to the online stores
you want by way of the paths that others have laid out for you.
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Chapter Two provides the information you need to become an independent
shopper, using search engines and price-comparison sites, and auctions.
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Chapter Three gives you pointers on advanced techniques, which can help
you become a creative shopper -- sharing experiences with and getting advice
from other shoppers, and becoming a full member of the online community.
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Part 2 covers special cases, where there are major differences in how you
shop based on the kinds of things you are looking for:
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Chapter Four -- books, music, and videotapes
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Chapter Five -- computers and software
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Chapter Six -- travel
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Chapter Seven -- food
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Chapter Eight -- money, including loans, insurance, and investments
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Chapter Nine -- cars
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Chapter Ten -- real estate, including houses, apartments, and roommates
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More shopping ideas and resources (the appendices)
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Bio of the author and why he wrote this book
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Acknowledgements and thank you's
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Web Business Bootcamp: Hands-on Internet lessons for managers, entrepreneurs,
and professionals looking for online business success by Richard Seltzer
(originally published by Wiley, 2002)
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Epigraph -- A Glimpse of the Future
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Preface
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Acknowledgements
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Author
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Chapter 1. Welcome to the land of the free
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Chapter 2. The value of anonymity: privacy and masquerade
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Chapter 3. Make your own Web pages on your PC
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Chapter 4. Assemble your pages to form a Web site
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Chapter 5. Let people know that you're there
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Chapter 6. How to improve your Web site
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Chapter 7. Building your audience with online interaction
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Chapter 8. Building relationships with customers: what you can learn from
selling at auctions
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Chapter 9. What to do with an audience and what else to do with your content
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Chapter 10. Going global
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Chapter 11. Experimenting with futures
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Chapter 12. The future of business on the Internet