Anne's
Archive is an amazing resource with over 40 million free ebooks online.
It is described as the largest truly open library in human history. All
their code and data are completely open source, and the way the site is
set up pretty much side steps all issues of copyright (they are only
sharing download links rather than the books themselves).
It
currently has 42,424,101
books and 98,536,735 papers in it's database, all
available to download, and these numbers are rapidly growing. It
includes a lot of conspiracy books, some of which are heavily censored
and hard to find elsewhere.
I have been asked how it all works, so here are some basic instructions showing how to download eBooks:
First go to the Anna's Archive website and enter the author or title you are looking for in the search box - https://annas-archive.org/
The
results of your search will rapidly appear, & if you want to filter
by format, tick the formats you are after, (for example, I like PDF or EPUB) in the file types on the left
After
you select the book you want, click on one of the two "slow download"
options - If you are new to the site you won't be a paid subscriber, but these will still both work fine.
Don't get carried away, you can only do one download at a time
from each of the options.
There
are daily limits on how many books you can download, I'm not sure what
they are, possibly 10?. If you do too many downloads the site
stops working. Leave it a a day and try again. Anne's Archive is
certainly not the only site to find eBooks, just the easiest on to use.
This website describes a bunch of other ebook download alternative sites
Next, remember to hit the "Download now" link to start the book downloading
Save
your eBooks in a folder (don't change or rename this folder once you
start using them on your eBook reader or your books will disappear from
the reader & you will have to add them again) - I edit the names
of the new books before adding them to my eBook reader because the file
names of eBooks downloaded through Anne's Archive tend to be very long.
On my Windows PC I use Calibre eBook reader which can be downloaded here
I was
trying to keep things simple for people new to eBooks and tested some other more basic eBook readers such as Ice Cream reader, but I prefer having all the features of Calibre (which is free anyway) - it's slightly more complex at first
but it does everything I want.
For reading books on an Android tablet or phone I use the Read Era app
which is really good. It's not set up for all the more complex text
editing stuff that Calibre can do, but is great for displaying and
reading your eBook collections. Although its not designed for PC use, it
apparently can be installed on a windows PC - I'm about to try doing
that and instructions for installing it on a Widows PC are here
Having access to 42 million eBooks is pretty amazing, and before you know it, you can have your own vast library.