jock123 Moderator
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#4 · Posted: 13 Dec 2007 09:37
number1fan Is there a treasure trove of Tintin books there? They would just be the standard editions, as have been available in the shops, rather than a treasure-trove, per se; the legal deposit part of the title is to do with an Act of Parliament, which allows these libraries to request a copy of every book published within a year of its publication date (the exception is the British Library, which doesn't have to request, it is up to the publisher to send the books). So perhaps if you wanted to look at something which isn't currently in print (the film books, the Making of... series, Popol), and which tend to be scarce, then it would be really useful; but the bulk of the deposit will be the books as we know them. As Rik says above, the libraries tend not to be open to the public the way your local lending library would be. I've got a British Library card, as it happens, for some research I was doing, and you have to be interviewed and provide details of your work to prove that there is a reason for you to access the collection. You might also want to bear in mind that there is a possibility that a book you want to look at won't be on the site you visit, but held in a depository elsewhere - the Bodleian is very pressed for space, for example, at its main building, and uses storage elsewhere as well as on that site. They'd call it up for you, but you might have to wait.
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