MY GPC LIBRARY, our eBook subscription program, consists of about 800 eBook titles and growing. Subscribers can look for names or places across all our eBooks–not just book by book—in a single search. The platform allows you to set bookmarks, make notes, and add citations as you work. Because you will have access to the entirety of every book, you can search for relatives or find neighbors of your ancestors to add context to your family history. And if you travel for your research, you can work remotely or online, and things still stay in sync.
As a Genealogy Pointers subscriber, you already understand the value of working with the leading books in the field of genealogy. Imagine having access to the electronic equivalent of a $40,000 library of outstanding genealogy reference books! Now, with our enhanced search features, you will have unmatched access.
But that’s not all. As promised, we continue to add titles to the LIBRARY. You will be surprised to learn that we just included our two hottest print titles: the Fourth Edition of Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace, by Elizabeth Shown Mills; and The Complete Guide to Family TreeDNA, by Roberta Estes. Other popular books now in the collection include Drew Smith’s masterful beginner’s book, Generation by Generation; Mastering Spanish Handwriting and Documents, by George and Peggy Ryskamp and H. Leandro Soria; Brian Mitchell’s handy guidebook, New Pocket Guide to Irish Genealogy; DNA for Native American Genealogy, also by Roberta Estes; and more.
Think about it for a moment For just $75.00, the price of a six-month subscription, you can access and search any of 800 different publications. That’s less than the cost of almost any two of our print books. Here’s a small sampling of what you would be getting: the incomparable treatment of the first six generations of the settlers of Jamestown, Virginia— the three-volume Adventurers of Purse and Person; the entire Barbour Collection of Connecticut Vital Records; the complete 1790 U.S. Federal Census; the best set of rosters and pension records from the Revolutionary War; guidebooks for finding elusive female ancestors, county courthouse records, state census records; and hundreds upon hundreds of other searchable publications as well. Still not convinced. Try it for just three months. You won’t be sorry.