The copyright page is generally on the reverse of the title page rather than on the back of the book. It includes copyright and printing information.
all of above.
The copyright usually is located at the back of the first page or the front cover of the book.
Technically, it can't; what probably happened is they didn't expect it to be made available until 2013, and printed it that way.
Assuming you have a license from the copyright holder to print the song in your book, you would hold the rights for the book as a compilation.
There may be a number of reasons that a book would not have a copyright notice1) If it was published after 1989 there is no requirement for a copyright notice to be displayed2) The book may be in the public domain due to copyright expiration3) The book may have been published under a "copyleft" or "Creative Commons" license which permits more liberal use than copyright.4) The book may not have been copyrighted by choice of the author
There may be a number of reasons that a book would not have a copyright notice1) If it was published after 1989 there is no requirement for a copyright notice to be displayed2) The book may be in the public domain due to copyright expiration3) The book may have been published under a "copyleft" or "Creative Commons" license which permits more liberal use than copyright.4) The book may not have been copyrighted by choice of the author
Typically the earliest date will be the copyright date of the original work, and the latest date will be the copyright of the particular edition you have. If the notification is not completely clear, the cataloging-in-publication information should help.For example, I am looking at Kohn on Music Licensing, 4th edition. The notification is © 1992-2010. This would mean that the first edition came out in 1992, and the work is consistently being revised. However the CIP data for this physical book gives the Library of Congress classification as KF3035.K64 2000, which means this 4th edition book was first published in 2000. Going back to the original notification of © 1992-2010, I would expect that this particular copy was printed in 2010.For the purposes of a bibliography, I would give the date of this 4th edition book as 2000. For the purpose of determining copyright status, the copyright and publication dates are immaterial: it will be protected for the life of the authors plus 70 years.
You can determine the publication year of a book by looking at the copyright page, which is typically located on the back of the title page. The publication year is usually listed near the copyright information.
You can find the publication date of a book by looking at the copyright page, which is typically located on the back of the title page. The publication date is usually listed near the copyright information.
You can determine the publication date of a book by looking at the copyright page, which is typically located on the back of the title page. The copyright page will usually include the publication date along with other important information about the book.
A book published in 1973 would still be protected by copyright, but some specific limited uses are allowed without a license. Extensive or commercial uses would need to be licensed.
"Where the Red Fern Grows" by Wilson Rawls was first published in 1961. As such, the copyright for the book would extend for 95 years, meaning it would be under copyright until 2056 unless the copyright is renewed.