Not everything made of paper is a book

Exactly what is “ephemera,” anyway? You may have spotted that subcategory under our “Antiquarian and Collectibles.” Well, according to Merriam Webster, it is “ephemera plural: paper items (such as posters, broadsides, and tickets) that were originally meant to be discarded after use but have since become collectibles.”

According to Mothergooseberry Books, it is some really neat old pieces of history! We have newspapers, photos, vintage ads, playbills and programs, tickets, etc. And postcards. LOTS and LOTS of postcards. Basically, if it’s made of paper and has some kind of artwork / photography to look at, or words printed to read on it, it qualifies as ephemera in our “book.”

We have a lot of that, and we get really excited when we come across something so scarce that we wonder if it has to be a one-of-a-kind find! One example is this postcard for which we could find no other example anywhere on the internet. It is a photographic postcard of a very historical event: The entry of Kaiser Franz Josef into Berlin on May 4, 1900. It is so scarce that we even watermarked our photo to discourage pirates from borrowing it and trying to sell if they don’t really own one. Just browse our “postcards” category and enjoy the trip back in time!

Entry of Kaiser Franz Josef into Berlin on May 4, 1900.

Entry of Kaiser Franz Josef into Berlin on May 4, 1900.

Posted in Ephemera | Comments Off on Not everything made of paper is a book

Reviews of some Mothergooseberry Books

Remember having to give “book reports” when you were in school and getting graded on them? Well, stay tuned for reviews of some of our books.

Oh, and no one will be handing out grades on our reviews.

 

 

Posted in Reviews | Comments Off on Reviews of some Mothergooseberry Books

We love books! And chances are so do you!

Welcome fellow book lovers! We love books and chances are you do, too!

Reading transports a person to the most exotic of destinations. Through the magic of books, we experience people, places and things not only in the ancient past, our present day time, but even the future. Reading and writing remains humankind’s most advanced and remarkable technology and most powerful tool in changing minds, civilizations, history, and destinies.

We will share a common love here. Our love of other worlds found in the pages of those treasures we readers cherish: books.

We will review.

We will discuss.

We will question.

But most of all, we will share.

Posted in Books | Comments Off on We love books! And chances are so do you!