All these books are in the public domain, which for the vast majority of them means they were published before 1923. Many books in the public domain are available in electronic format for free, and many publishers have reproduced books in the public domain, including some of the ones we have published ourselves. But we believe there is value in taking the time to reissue our own version when our experienced genealogists tell us a book remains relevant and the research within has been shown to hold up over time.
Each book has a new foreword written by someone associated with NEHGS who can give the book context for twenty-first-century researchers. Some of the lecturers you may be familiar with, including David Dearborn, David Lambert, and Chris Child, have both written forewords and recommended books to add to the series. And we think it’s helpful to our members and friends when, for example, they hear Alice Kane recommend a book during a talk and we are able to offer them a way to immediately get a copy for themselves. The books are also fun for the publications department to produce – we get the chance to research historical artwork for the cover and pick a nice color for the background.
But as much as we like how the various designs complement each other when displayed together on a shelf, we especially like how this series enables NEHGS to share some of the staff’s expert knowledge in a tangible, useful way. NEHGS recently published the nineteenth title in the series, and our experts are far from running out of suggestions for more books to publish!