I just came across this link, which has quite a few classics (no Tolkien, alas):
http://www.online-literature.com/
There's this link, if you prefer very dry non-fiction, from the National Academy (of Science) Press:
http://www.nap.edu/
The University of Pennsylvania Library has some, too:
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/
For those of you currently reading Jane Austin, this link has some of her books:
http://www.technotopia.com/books/
And a big list of additional links:
http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/
I just finished reading Waiting for Godot at:
http://samuel-beckett.net/
Any thoughts about on-line reading? I've had to do quite a bit with my college classes (partly because I'm too stingy to buy the book or print out the book and read it on paper). I don't like being tethered to a laptop, but I do like getting things for free.
Books on line
Wow, thanks, narya. What a find.
It's hard for me to do the actual reading online. Too tough on my eyes. But if I really want something for multiple re-readings I download and print.
And sometimes, you know, you want to taste fiction before actually buying the book. This is a good way to sample new authors.
Jn
It's hard for me to do the actual reading online. Too tough on my eyes. But if I really want something for multiple re-readings I download and print.
And sometimes, you know, you want to taste fiction before actually buying the book. This is a good way to sample new authors.
Jn
A fool's paradise is a wise man's hell.
- Old_Tom_Bombadil
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That's true for me, too. Also, I prefer to be lie down while I read.Jnyusa wrote:It's hard for me to do the actual reading online. Too tough on my eyes.
My wife doesn't spend nearly as much time on her computer as I do mine, but she likes to download books to her iPAQ. I like plain, old-fashioned books printed on paper.
If I couldn't afford to purchase books I'd borrow them from a library. In fact, I did a lot of that when I was growing up. Of course reading books online wasn't even an option back then.
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And then, there's of course Project Gutenberg.
I also love Bartleby.com
But on the whole, I don't read books online. It's good for checking and finding quotes, but I prefer a more comfortable position for reading, too.
I think there's hardly anything old enough to have editions free of copyright that's not online.
That doesn't include Tolkien yet, of course.
I also love Bartleby.com
But on the whole, I don't read books online. It's good for checking and finding quotes, but I prefer a more comfortable position for reading, too.
I think there's hardly anything old enough to have editions free of copyright that's not online.
That doesn't include Tolkien yet, of course.
but being a cheerful hobbit he had not needed hope, as long as despair could be postponed.