This might seem like a silly question, but how do such books actually help anything by being part of the bookshare collection? I assume you are talking about books like Where the Wild Things Are. Such books are so dependant on the pictures that I'm really not sure what a blind person would do with them, no matter how well the pictures are described. Am I just missing something here? On 8/1/09, Jamie Yates, CPhT <mirxtech@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Most children's picture books, even today, do not have page numbers. I know > Bookshare's new policy is that books have to have page numbers, but I don't > know if Bookshare wants them added even if they weren't there in the print > book, or if the new tools just number the pages automatically. > > -- > Jamie in Michigan > Currently Reading: The Curse of the Holy Pail by Sue Ann Jaffarian > See everything I've read this year at: www.michrxtech.com/books.html > -- Soronel Haetir soronel.haetir@xxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe from this list send a blank Email to bksvol-discuss-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx put the word 'unsubscribe' by itself in the subject line. To get a list of available commands, put the word 'help' by itself in the subject line.