E-books: more common?
Mar. 28th, 2008 03:45 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I have just downloaded _On the Origin Of Species_ by Charles Darwin from manybooks.net. Richard Dawkins said he was a good writer (though my Dad thought he was awful; we'll see whose taste more closely matches mine), and I have the bookmark and it's free and easy, so why not? If I don't like it, I'll just delete it; no harm, no foul.
In the process, I looked at my Firefox list of recent downloads and noticed four free e-books/stories downloaded just this afternoon. One is from Tor Book's new website, which is giving away free e-books as a promotion; two are from Fictionwise.com, which is giving away free copies of Nebula Nominees as a promotion; and the last is Darwin's opus.
Now I'm wondering--is there a big upsurge in the availablity of e-books? Or are they just crossing my personal horizon more because of the e-book-related Web pages and blogs I've been reading?
In the process, I looked at my Firefox list of recent downloads and noticed four free e-books/stories downloaded just this afternoon. One is from Tor Book's new website, which is giving away free e-books as a promotion; two are from Fictionwise.com, which is giving away free copies of Nebula Nominees as a promotion; and the last is Darwin's opus.
Now I'm wondering--is there a big upsurge in the availablity of e-books? Or are they just crossing my personal horizon more because of the e-book-related Web pages and blogs I've been reading?
no subject
Date: 2008-03-28 08:20 pm (UTC)As more useable (i.e. not just PDA) size readers came on the market it's been growing. Kindle has raised the awareness quite a bit but we still love ours and have contaminated Stephen :).
no subject
Date: 2008-03-29 06:05 pm (UTC)