So I recently got an e-reader and have started collecting e-books for it, but a lot of books seem to only be available through Amazon/Kindle. I don’t want anything to do with that company. Where do I even start looking? I have my local library apps and have scoured Project Gutenberg and some similar sites. While this is great for classics and older stuff, I want newer books too, specifically science fiction and fantasy. Have looked at author’s websites but they typically link to Amazon or physical copies.
Ebooks.com often sells drm-free ebooks, depending on if the publisher allows it
Thanks for the tip.
Also a friendly reminder to support your local library. Many libraries offer digital and audio books now that you can download! All for free!
Libby/Overdrive for ‘borrowing’ getting ebooks form your local Library. The Internet Archive is another good free source. When they aren’t being attacked by publishers and hackers anyway.
Yep, I’ve found some books on Libby and BookBites which is what my local library offers, but not everything I’m looking for.
The Internet Archive is great and deserves support!
Honorable mention must be made of Anna’s Archive. It’s a little slow, but you can probably download the books faster than you can read them.
Libgen is correct answer
Oh wow!
Also get any scientific paper/study basically
When you get tired of trying to pay for it and realise if they don’t want to make it easy for you to purchase then you should pirate it then check out myanonamouse :)
Thanks! I’m interested for sure. I can use this and then donate directly to the authors if that’s possible :)
No worries. Whilst it is a private tracker they have open registration most of the time and you just need to log in at a specific time to speak to someone and have a small interview thing to join. Really nice, friendly community. Hope you can find what you are after!
As many users mentioned all shadow libraries, but also Google just search for the title with
type:pdf
or epub and have direct links to that book. Ex: harry Potter type:pdfhttps://standardebooks.org/ for public domain works.
and other ebooks i own are most likely from https://www.humblebundle.com/
Ah, yes, HumbleBundle! I forgot about them. Thanks!
As an FYI, Some of the bundles lately have been fulfilled through Kobo, they’re still epubs and kobo’s drm is pretty easy to strip though.
Anna’s archive https://annas-archive.org
Library genesis https://libgenesis.net
Project Gutenberg https://www.gutenberg.org
I’d like to add zlibrary to the list https://zlibrary.st/new-z-library-official-website-links
Bookshop.org is a great spot. Directs money to small independent book stores from your purchase and you can even choose which book store gets the money.
I love the idea behind that site! Unfortunately they don’t seem to sell ebooks.
It is from rakuden the concurrent of amazon for ebook
My library’s app will install them remotely via overdrive. If it’s not on there, Usenet works as well as anything else.
I typically buy from Barnes and Noble for ebooks. They sell DRM laden ePub files, but the DRM is easy to strip with some readily available tools. Without the DRM I have a nice universally supported industry standard format.
Barnes & Noble used to be pretty inconvenient to strip the DRM, that was one of many reasons I switched to Kobo. That’s nice that it’s easy again.
Calibre and a plugin.
I buy my ebooks from Bookapy. No DRM shit, you just download .epub or .pdf files.
https://www.baen.com/allbooks/ has been letting people download ebooks for a loooong time. Great little site.
They also have a collection of free books: https://www.baen.com/categories/free-library.html
One of the more ethical choices. You get the books in multiple formats and you own it.
I’ve always been impressed with Baen. They took a hard stance against DRM from the beginning.
Baen Ebooks, like its predecessor, does not use DRM (i.e., copy protection), in accordance with Jim Baen’s belief that DRM “just made it hard for people to read books, the worst mistake a publisher could make.” Eric Flint, writing soon after Baen’s death in 2006, noted that “in his fight against DRM, Jim stood alone as a publisher” and argued that Baen Book’s success “demonstrated in practice that all the propaganda [in favor of] DRM is, in addition to everything else, so much hogwash even on the practical level of a publishing house’s profits and losses.”