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For example, if a book is written describing a new way to organize books in library, a reader can freely use that method without being sued, but what is written in the book, the original expression of the idea, may not be copied. One might be able to obtain a patent for the method, but that is a different body of law. If there is art on the cover of the book, that art may also be copyrighted. If the book lists only facts, one might say that it is not original, but if the facts are selected and arranged in an original manner, the book may be copyrighted.
In the English decision of Donoghue v. Allied Newspapers Ltd [1938] Ch 106, the court argued that "the person who has clothed the idea in form, whether by means of a picture, a play or a book" owns the copyright. Even more eloquently, Latham CJ in the Australian decision of Victoria Park Racing and Recreation Grounds Co. Ltd v. Taylor (1937) 58 CLR 479 and 498 argued that if you are the first person to announce that a man has fallen off a bus, you cannot use the law of copyright to stop other people from announcing that fact.