booklore

Related to booklore: Chapters, Amazon.ca

book·lore

 (bo͝ok′lôr′)
n.
Knowledge gained from books.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

booklore

(ˈbʊkˌlɔː)
n
any knowledge or belief gained from books
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
C.) Andersen's fairy tales, situated as they are in a crosscultural mix between folklore, booklore and medialore, and therefore useful as "trash" in modern children's FairyPlay.
Iqbal again while telling us about the importance of nature writes, "All the wonderful booklore in your library is not worth one glorious sunset on the banks of the Ravi."10
Fuks-Mansfeld, who write, "It is a remarkable and regrettable fact that most of the historians of the book and booklore from the oldest times to the present day completely neglect the history of the Jewish book.
If manuscripts were at first studied as a means to learn more about the content of a text, that is, as an ancillary science to philology, nowadays codicology, which rather irreverently could be defined as everything about the manuscript except its text, has particularly proved to be rewarding for the study of Islamic booklore and a better understanding of Muslim scholarship.
David Suzuki's Green Guide turned out to be a big seller at stores across the country, including Banyen Books in Vancouver, Pages Books and Magazines in Toronto, and Booklore in Orangeville, Ontario, among others.
Booklore would make an appearance and talk about how he much preferred to spend his time getting new books ready for the children to borrow than he did cleaning up and fixing old books.
Leslie and me, "The Fink/Liebermann Visit to the Kaifeng Jews," Studies in Bibliography and Booklore, Vol.
Epstein: "Simon Levi Ginzburg's illustrated customal of Venice, 1593 and its travels," Proceedings of the Fifth World Congress of Jewish Studies 4 (1973); Chone Shmeruk: "Haiyurim min haminhagim beyidish Venitzia 1593," Studies in Bibliography and Booklore 15 (1984); Chone Shmeruk: Haiyurim lesifrei yidish bameot ha 16-17 (Jerusalem: Akademon, 1986); Chone Shmeruk: "Reshimah kronologit shel hamahadurot beyidish shel haminhagim shel Shimon Halevi Ginzburg ad 1800: Haiyurim min haminhagim beyidish (Venitzia 1593)," Studies in Bibliography and Booklore 15 (1984).
See Moshe Perlmann, "Ibn Qayyim and Samau al al-Maghribi," Journal of Jewish Booklore 3 (1942): 71-74.
Nancy Frater, owner of Booklore in Orangeville, Ontario, says it's a useful how-to green shopping guide.