Google and free ebooks




















Use of automated tools to access the website may trigger a block of your access. See full terms of use here. Welcome to Project Gutenberg Project Gutenberg is a library of over 60, free eBooks Choose among free epub and Kindle eBooks, download them or read them online. Salve Venetia, gleanings from Venetian history; vol. II by F. Marion Crawford. The Fourth Dimension by C. Howard Hinton. A Child's History of the World by V. Frequently Asked Questions about Project Gutenberg.

You can borrow ebooks and audiobooks anytime and on any device. All you need is a valid library card or student ID. You get slightly different content as each library or school picks the digital content they want for their users. These books are a digitized version of books that attained the public domain status.

They have created Books with separate editions optimized for devices with different screen sizes like PCs, Tablets, and Mobiles. You require membership registration to download pdf books from their library.

With over 59, free eBooks, Project Gutenberg offers a good reading list. For Project Gutenberg , many volunteers helped in making these books available to read online and for free. There are no fees or registration but they do ask for donations or volunteering which you can do if you prefer to.

Books can be searched by title, author, top e-books and even offline catalogue search. One can even save books directly to Google Drive or DropBox. Sharing ebook is an online repository of over books that you can legally download in PDF format for free and without any registration required. This is convenient because PDF files are readable by almost all document readers and ebook applications.

The listed categories include philosophy, novels, travel, psychology, art, business, politics, business, language learning, free comics, self-help, and biography. For ebooks that fall into unlisted categories, you can just search for them manually. You can also subscribe to the newsletter to be informed about newly added books. Snewd is an Open Internet Project of free eBooks created in order to provide the public with high quality, free eBooks with catalogue sources from popular platforms such as Project Gutenburg.

Snewd sources the raw files of books in the public domain formats them and then edits them into professional-style eBooks. As a Snewd user, you can subscribe to their mailing list and receive updates of the latest published titles as well as contact them directly if you have any inquiries. You will also find that the UI is easy to navigate.

CrazyBooks is an online repository where you can either follow the book links to purchase them on Amazon or download them for free using a free user account. Like the other options in this list, you can send feedback directly to the managers of the site, explore books by categories, and search for books by title and author.

CrazyBooks seems like a relatively new project given that all its tags so far are art, fantasy, biography, religion, science, and history. Nevertheless, it has a user interface that is easy to use and the books you are looking for might just be on it. ArdBark is a link finding service that points users to several ebooks.

Unlike the alternatives in this list, it works as a repository to a variety of links found online and does not host any files on its servers. It features links to over ebooks of all categories and the ebooks themselves are split into free and non-free; with the non-free ebook content made available to only Ardbark Pro, Ardbark Basic, Ardbark Beginner and Ardbark Gold members.

If you are not sure about committing to subscription then you can take advantage of its free 7-day trial by registering an account. You can cancel anytime. One cool feature about Free-eBooks. Its aim is to contribute to the online world by providing links to millions of PDFs for users to access from any device. I hope you enjoyed reading the article as much as you would enjoy reading your favourite books on these e-book sites. Below is the comment section, do tell us your favourite book and the site where you could get them for free!

Choose from a diverse collection of public domain titles -- from well-known classics to obscure gems. You can get full text magazines from Google's archive, including titles like Life which are no longer published and Popular Science which have been around for over years and continue to be published.

Titles are limited. Google has worked with newspapers to digitize materials via the News Archive Partner Program. The date to which these newspapers go back varies by newspaper, but many go back to the mid 19th century, and some even earlier.



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