Reversible book having cover-connecting insert

4598934
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Inventors

Cashel, Mary E.

Application #

797690

Filed

Nov-13-1985

Published

Jul-8-1986

Current US Class

281/2
281/5

International Classes

B42D 019/00; B42D 001/00

Field of Search

281/2 281/5 281/27 281/45 402/7 434/178 446/47 446/48 282/22 40/124.1

Referenced by:

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Citation

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Abstract
A reversible book is provided having a front cover and a back cover and having pages in the form of a sheet in an accordian fold, the sheet affixed at one end to the front cover and at the other end to the back cover, and having a ribbon-like element anchored at one end to the front cover and anchored at its other end to the back cover, the ribbon passing through vertical slots in each fold of the sheet. The book has no spine, but is held together by the sheet and the ribbon element, on both sides of each of which may appear illustrations and/or a story. The reader proceeds through the book from front cover to back cover, reading material on the front of the sheet and ribbon, and then pulls the back cover around toward him and reads on with the same story or a new story, proceeding from back cover to front cover, reading material which was originally not in view being on the back of the sheet and ribbon first read.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A book comprising a front cover and a back cover and an elongate sheet having two ends and two sides, said sheet being folded into a multiplicity of substantially uniform accordian-like folds to form the pages of said book, one end of said sheet being affixed to said front cover and the other end of said sheet being affixed to said back cover, said sheet having vertical slot-like openings through each of said pages, and including a ribbon-like element having at least one illustration thereon and having two ends, one end of said ribbon being anchored to said front cover and the other end of said ribbon being anchored to said back cover, said ribbon extending through each of said vertical slots in said pages.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to a new form of book construction.

A book is in effect a substantial number of printed pages bound together in bulk. The name comes from the old Saxon root boc, a beech, whose derivatives exist in various northern tongues; it recalls an early type of northern book in which slabs of oak, beech, or fir were the covers. But the primitive book can be traced much farther back in the East, where Chaldean inscribed tiles exist 7000 years old and more, whose cuneiform letters were made on soft clay by scribes; the tile was then baked in a kiln. Another ancient type of book was the Egyptian papyrus roll, made from the pith of the reed from which comes the word paper, and put in a roller like a map. It was a perishable material, and few examples have survived. For over ten centuries, papyrus rolls or volumes were in use; and many copies of the same work were often made by a number of scribes who wrote down simultaneously the text dictated by an author or a reader. The papyrus rolls were kept in jars and canisters, or collected in boxes, which served to preserve them from destruction.
 
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