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Old Jul 11, 2010, 11:44 AM
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Ygrec23 Ygrec23 is offline
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Member Since: Apr 2010
Location: Florida
Posts: 2,853
Hello, All,

There seem to be some PC-ers who are not as familiar as other PC'ers with free online e-libraries. In order to close that particular gap, I'd like this new thread to contain references from interested PC'ers to their known or favorite free online libraries. This is NOT with reference to the new phenomenon of Kindles, etc. The books available from the free libraries I'm talking about will be read on the computer screen or printed out if you'd rather. You simply log on to the library in question, go to their catalogs (usually arranged by author or title), find a book you believe you'd like to read, download it in a minute or two and start reading.

The downloader usually has the choice of several different formats in which to download. I usually use either .txt or .html. I like the .txt format because then you can format the book as you want with whatever word processing program you have. For example, as my mother's eyesight worsened when she was in her eighties, she could tell me which classics to download and print for her and in what size type.

Because of copyright laws, the contents of most of these libraries, while voluminous, are limited by some arbitrary date. In the United States, the date (I think) is 1923. In other places, different dates are used. I believe Google is buying up a lot of obscure old copyrights that to anyone else would have little value, but do have value to Google to put on their new eLibrary enterprise.

So, if any of you are already aware of free eLibrairies and have some saved in your favorites, please be so kind as to post their URLs here on this thread so others can use them. I'm starting off today with my favorite: Project Gutenberg (they have tens of thousands of books):

http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page

Take care!

Last edited by Ygrec23; Jul 11, 2010 at 12:18 PM.