RSS Feed
Feb 5

Little Free Library

Posted on Thursday, February 5, 2015 in Links, Literature

Little Free Library

Painted red and shaped like a miniature one-room schoolhouse, the first Little Free Library—built by Todd Bol in Hudson, Wisconsin, in 2009—launched what would become a worldwide movement in just a few years.

Read more here.

I love this idea. There should be something like it here in Sweden. Anything to do with books is usually great.

Feb 2

10 Free Online Resources to Improve Your Writing | Interesting Literature

Posted on Monday, February 2, 2015 in Writing links

Check them out here.

Dec 16

Five Free Author Gifts For Christmas. | Jen’s Pen Den

Posted on Tuesday, December 16, 2014 in Writing links

Read more here.

Dec 13

Free legal downloads of books

Posted on Thursday, December 13, 2012 in Books, Other

Recently I read a post on Tumblr where someone listed links where you could download free books. Some of those books were modern or at least still copyrighted books. As far as I know copyrighted books aren’t available for free downloads.

Now I’m not familiar with the copyright laws in all countries throughout the world, but I do know that old books – in many cases, for instance in the USA, books published before 1923. In Scandinavia (Sweden) where I live, the copyright expires when the author has been dead for at least 70 years.

You can get modern books when the author chooses to allow people to download them for free. It might be the first book or some other older book, or the first book in a series. Many authors also allow free downloads of novellas and short stories, perhaps hoping to sell more of their full length work.

Another way to read ‘free’ books legally is to borrow e-books from the library (or for that matter, printed books too).

As far as I understand, it doesn’t matter if you’ve bought a title as a printed book. You still need to pay for the e-book if you want one. That is, unless it was a special deal where you buy a title as a printed book and an e-book.

Amazon is a very good source for free modern books. Some may have a sort of ‘message’ – I’ve read that sometimes authors try to promote their religion by writing free books. But like I described above, you can also get one book in a series or shorter fiction by a novel writer who is hoping to sell more novels. Don’t forget, if you live in the US and many other parts of the world you have to go to amazon.com, not for instance amazon.co.uk, unless of course you live in the UK.

The library is another great source for free books.

Here is a list of links to free (legal) download sites:

https://www.bookeenstore.com/fr/free
http://www.kobobooks.com/free_ebooks
http://manybooks.net/
http://www.baen.com/library/
http://www.gutenberg.org/catalog/
http://www.freesfonline.de/Authors.html
http://runeberg.org/
http://litteraturbanken.se/#!start
http://www.fantasy-magazine.com/fiction/
http://www.sacred-texts.com/ring/two/
http://www.sacred-texts.com/ring/index.htm
http://www.readprint.com/
http://e-library.net/Fantasy.htm
http://www.getfreeebooks.com/?tag=fantasy
http://worldebookfair.org/
http://en.childrenslibrary.org/index.shtml
http://www.smashwords.com/
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=sr_st?bbn=1286228011&qid=1354222865&rh=n%3A133140011%2Cn%3A!133143011%2Cn%3A!251259011%2Cn%3A1286228011%2Cn%3A157028011&sort=price
http://bookboon.com/se
http://blakatt.com/index.php?option=com_docman&task=cat_view&gid=36&Itemid=53
http://www.bookyards.com/index.html

http://archiveofourown.org/
http://umrion.net/archives/

Many of these are in English, but you can also find books in Swedish, French and other languages. The last two are fan fiction sites.

Apr 11

Alternatives to Google, Facebook, Windows Live,Yahoo…

Posted on Wednesday, April 11, 2012 in Other

Time for an updated post about some great alternatives to the big players on the internet. I like them. You might not even be looking for any, but if you do or if you’re just looking for something new, you might find something interesting here.

Search

Ixquick  – (available in many languages)
DuckDuckGo

Email

Gmx (free, quite a lot of space and other cool features)
Fastmail.fm  (quite good email service, imap, not pop in the free version)
Icerocket  (ok web email)
Mail.com  (powered by the same service as GMX)
Caring4animals.com (for those of us who care about animals)

Chat/IM

Jabber info (for the computer or smartphone – use Adium for the computer or IM+  on your phone)
Touch (for your smartphone)

Photo Album

LenzUs

Community

Care2 (free donations, petitions, e-cards…)
Goodreads  (book community)

Blog/Tumblelog

WordPress.org, WordPress.com (available in English and many other languages)
Dreamwidth (blog community like Livejournal – just as fan fiction friendly)
Tumblr
Soup (if you have Tumblr or any of a number of other webb services you can set up an automatic import)

Dec 5

Free library books online

Posted on Sunday, December 5, 2010 in Books, Other

Since I found out that library books are available as free downloads here in Sweden, I’ve wanted to try. For various reasons, I’d really prefer not to have to go to the library and pick up actual books (though when it comes to buying new copies at the book store, it’s the other way around.)

Anyway, last night I decided to have a go. I did a search for a couple of mysteries I’ve wanted to read, but not felt able to buy – a combination of lack of money and doubts about the quality of those books – and found five titles. I thought ‘Great!’.

Most of the books were supposedly available in several different formats, including mobi and epub. I’d read that you could download the books from your computer to a portable device (iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad, any kind of e-book reader…). That’s interesting, even though I don’t own any such device, not personally. However, it was soon evident that all those symbols next to the title didn’t mean a thing. Adobe Digital Edition was the only software that worked. It gets worse.

I typed in my library card number and borrowed the first book on my list. So far, so good. I checked that I could at least open it on the computer and I could. Then I went on to the next two books and unfortunately, I got them in the reverse order of publication. When I’d finished the download of book nr 2 in the series, I get an error message saying I can only download three books in a seven day period. Three? I looked over the download window and the file where the books were saved. No. Just two. But the site was convinced. I’d already downloaded my three books. Since I refuse to read book 2 in a series before book 1, for all intents and purposes, I only got one book out of the whole frustrating experience. Three books might have been enough for seven days, one definitely isn’t.

Then my sister tried to transfer the book to her iPhone, just to see if it could be done and – to make a long story short – it couldn’t. Well, to be clear, it could be transferred, but then it couldn’t be opened. She went to check on the newspaper article where we’d found out about electronic book borrowing, and eventually found a couple of solutions that were supposedly going to work. Again, to make a long story short, neither of them did.

By that time, I was beginning to regret thinking of this idea in the first place, but at least I’ll now be able to read book three in a series where I’ve actually read books 1 and 2. And I’ll be able to try again in seven days time.

All this has also given me food for thought.

After our successful experiment with the Kindle, I had begun to plan ahead to a time when I’ll be able to afford an e-book reader and/or an iPod Touch or possibly an iPad. Now I’m wondering if I should bother. I love the Kindle. I’m sure I’d like the iPod Touch and the iPad, but would I actually have any real use for them?

I’m a book lover first and foremost even if I do love a shiny gadget, but the way I see it, I’d primarily be getting the e-book reader so I can download all those free books from Project Gutenberg and similar sites. I don’t see myself spending any money on new e-books. For one, they’re actually a lot more expensive than a paperback, and as far as I can understand, I won’t be able to read my free downloads on the Kindle. Secondly,  in my opinion, nothing beats the feeling of holding a ‘real’, printed paper book in my hands.

I could get an iPod Touch when my old iPods (very old) stop working, which might be relatively soon, judging by the time it takes to charge them and how long they last before the next charge. But if I can’t even read my library books on it, maybe it won’t be worth it. As it happens, I really prefer listening to something with better sound quality. I’m not into taking all kinds of gadgets along when I go out. It’s just not worth it.

Maybe I should just be grateful I’m leaning towards an option that will save me a lot of money, but somehow that doesn’t seem very cheering. At this time I could really use some cheering up.

Oh, well, I should probably just wait and see. For all I know, my financial situation could change in the near future and then I could take the whole thing under consideration again.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox

Join other followers: