Although I love paper books, ebooks are what really insures me against the dreaded “nothing to read” syndrome. To make sure that you all have plenty to read during these troubling times I have collected my favourite sources of free, legal (for some of the younger titles dependent on where you are) ebooks that don’t require a kindle ereader.
Project Gutenberg is my main source of ebooks and has as a very large collection of ebooks that are all in the US public domain. However the vast collection can sometimes be a problem as it may be hard to find the good stuff among all the obscure texts, unless you already know what you are looking for. If you don’t know what you are looking for the Top 100 list or the Bookshelves may help.
Apart from the more obvious classics I have enjoyed:
- Lady Susan, perhaps less accomplished than Jane Austen’s more famous works (which are of course also there), but a lot of fun.
- All the Sherlock Holmes novels and short stories.
- Three men in a boat and Three men on the bummel by Jerome K. Jerome.
- Tarzan of the Apes and A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (review)
- The haunted bookshop by Christopher Morley (review)
The MobileRead forum also has plenty of ebooks. Here you can find books in the Life+70 public domain, so some books not available at Project Gutenberg may be found here and legally downloaded if you are in a Life+70 year area.
- The Blue Castle by Lucy Maud Montgomery. Her more famous works are of course also there (and on Project Gutenberg as most of them are her earlier works), but this one is really charming and aimed at a slightly older audience.
Baen free library has a small collection of primarily Science fiction novels. Not all of them are good, even considering that they are free, but there are some fun novels to be found there. Be aware though that many of them end on a cliff hanger, which I guess is only fair when they give them away for free…
- Among the Baen novels I have enjoyed Agent of Change, Fire with fire and Boundary. However, what I like best are the yearly short story collections. Several of the authors can get tiring in larger doses, but most of them work well in the short story format, so these are a lot of fun and a good way to identify the better authors.
A temporary but wonderful resource is Archipelago Books Free Library, which has some really intriguing titles. Archipelago books focuses on high quality translated fiction, which makes them my favourite type of publisher, and now they have made 30 of their ebooks freely available until April 2nd, which is even better. I have downloaded all of them (and bought two more because how could I not?) so I will have enough to read for a while.
And finally, don’t forget your public library, many of them offer ebooks that can be downloaded from home.
Have I missed any good sources, large or small, or do you have any reading recommendations for me as I expand my ebook library?
Thank you! Isn’t Archipelago’s offer generous? Verso have a few free ebooks at the moment too.
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It is great! And I’m off to check out Verso’s offerings, thanks!
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I can’t manage Kindle, goodness knows I’ve tried, but these still sound to be great resources.
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I actually haven’t tried a Kindle but I do have another e-reader which I find great travel company.
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Great list of resources, thanks! 😀
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