Thursday, October 15, 2009
Free Books Online that Teachers can use
Genre Pages Free
Because this page is becoming extremely long I have switched the genre sections to their own pages. Please check these separate pages out if you are interested in a particular genre as they have some links that have not been added to this main list as of yet and they also have links to audio books.
- Free Children's Books Online
- Free Science Fiction & Fantasy Books Online
- Free Horror, Ghost & Gothic Books Online
- Free Romance Books Online
- Free Computer & Internet Books Online
- Free Mystery, Detective, Thriller & Crime (Fiction) Books Online
- Free "Westerns" Books Online
- Free Cooking, Food & Wine Books Online
- Free Religion & Spirituality Books Online
- Free Health, Fitness & Medicine Books Online
- Free Biography, Autobiography & Memoir Books Online
- Free Travel Books Online
- Free History Books Online
- Free Business Books Online
The lure? Electronic books she can download to her laptop. Beginning earlier this year, Ms. Lambert, a 19-year-old community college student in New Port Richey, Fla., borrowed volumes in the “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” series, “The Lovely Bones” by Alice Sebold and a vampire novel by Laurell K. Hamilton, without ever visiting an actual branch.
“I can just go online and type my library card number in and look through all the books that they have,” said Ms. Lambert, who usually downloads from the comfort of her bedroom. And, she added, “It’s all for free.”
Eager to attract digitally savvy patrons and capitalize on the growing popularity of electronic readers, public libraries across the country are expanding collections of books that reside on servers rather than shelves.
The idea is to capture borrowers who might not otherwise use the library, as well as to give existing customers the opportunity to try new formats.
“People still think of libraries as old dusty books on shelves, and it’s a perception we’re always trying to fight,” said Michael Colford, the director of information technology at the Boston Public Library. “If we don’t provide this material for them, they are just going to stop using the library altogether.”
About 5,400 public libraries now offer e-books, as well as digitally downloadable audio books. The collections are still tiny compared with print troves. The New York Public Library, for example, has about 18,300 e-book titles, compared with 860,500 in circulating print titles, and purchases of digital books represent less than 1 percent of the library’s overall acquisition budget. REad the complete original article here http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/15/books/15libraries.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print
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