A sample text widget

Etiam pulvinar consectetur dolor sed malesuada. Ut convallis euismod dolor nec pretium. Nunc ut tristique massa.

Nam sodales mi vitae dolor ullamcorper et vulputate enim accumsan. Morbi orci magna, tincidunt vitae molestie nec, molestie at mi. Nulla nulla lorem, suscipit in posuere in, interdum non magna.

About Our Readings

The essays and other readings posted in The New Eyes Project‘s several categories come in several varieties:

  • new writings created especially for The New Eyes Project and published here for the first time by permission;
  • previously published texts licensed for The New Eyes Project from the authors or copyright holders, as indicated in the copyright notices on such files;
  • public-domain material that is copyright-free;
  • relevant and presumably copyrighted material stored online via the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine but no longer available at its original publication site (due to site closure/redesign or other reasons).

In the last case, that of “orphaned” material, we republish it here strictly for nonprofit educational usage, with no claim to authorship or copyright thereto and no commercial intent. While we believe it deserves the additional useful life it achieves here at this site, we will promptly remove it upon request from rights holders.

In all cases, please respect the intellectual property rights of our contributors, who have waived any fees in permitting us to make these texts available for you to read. For duplication or republication rights, see the contact information at the end of each text.

To propose such a text for online publication here, please contact A. D. Coleman.

You can either print out the the original texts published here as blog posts or convert them to PDF format via thePrint/PDF button that appears at the bottom of each post and page. As a matter of policy, we link to material that is currently available elsewhere online at active websites; we do not replicate it here. But you can download it in several formats from its source sites.

Material retrieved via the WayBack machine, and some other texts, we have generally made available in the form of PDF files that open easily either within your browser (if you have it set that way), with Preview (on a Mac), or with Adobe Reader. For a free download of Adobe Reader, click here. For those like us on the Mac platform, if you wish to join any of these PDF files together, we recommend the free utility Combine PDFs, from Monkeybread Software; for note-making and other revisions of the PDFs, we recommend the freeware Skim.

— A. D. Coleman

Print Friendly, PDF & Email