Boy's and girl's library of useful and entertaining knowledge was an American literary book series intended for young readers first published in 1833 by the New York publisher J. & J. Harper, founded by brothers James Harper (1795âÂÂ1869) and John Harper (1797âÂÂ1875). Subsequently volumes of the series were published into the 1890s.
As the other famous series of the publisher â the Family Library (FL) and the School District Library (SDL) â it was published since the 1830s, âÂÂat the dawn of mass-market publishingâÂÂ.
As devout Methodists, the Harper brothers promoted reading as a means of moral uplift. As prominent publishers and key figures in the widespread religious and social reform movements of the era, they played a significant role in shaping education in American homes and schools. Most of the works were moralistic, didactic fiction. Besides original literatury, it contains also translations, for example The Swiss Family Robinson by Johann David Wyss, translated for the German (Der Schweizerische Robinson). Many of the volumes were written by the American writer, historian, educator and priest of the Episcopal Church Francis L. Hawks (1798âÂÂ1866), using the pseudonym "Uncle Philip".
The volumes are (partly in shortened form):