Discover the Best Places Online to Get Your Hands on Free E-Books
Free books on nearly any subject you can think of are all over the internet, ready to be downloaded, read, and shared. These are our favorite sites with free books covering a wide variety of subjects.
A huge quantity of books previously unavailable to the public was released starting in 2019 thanks to the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998. Because of an amendment to that act, works published between 1923 and 1977 can enter the public domain 95 years after their creation. Many of the sites listed below give access to the tens of thousands of books (plus movies, songs, and cartoons) available under this act. Downloads should be free and without retribution under U.S. copyright law.
Project Gutenberg is one of the largest and oldest sources for free books on the web, with over 70,000 downloadable titles available in a wide variety of formats. The vast majority are released in English, but there are other languages available.
Selection includes more than just classics and Creative Commons books.
Great categorization makes finding what you love easier.
Variety of download formats.
What We Don’t Like
A few areas of the site hardly ever receive updates.
Some books do cost money.
ManyBooks is one of the best resources on the web for free books in a variety of download formats. There are hundreds of titles here in all sorts of interesting genres, and they’re completely free. Not all the books are classics, so if you’re into other genres, this site is a good alternative to others in this list.
Unlike some sites, this one lets you browse free books by language. You can also search by author and genre. TheManyBooks Articles page is another handy way to browse their collection, with articles such as “Books Like A Match Made in Venice” and reviews.
Downloading books requires a free user account unless there’s a link to Amazon, in which case you can grab it with your Amazon account. There are often several download options, like EPUB, PDF, AZW3, and FB2. They’re also readable online through the site’s built-in book reader.
Good alternative if Internet Archive is too confusing.
Multiple formats available.
What We Don’t Like
Just pulls results from Internet Archive.
Some books can only be borrowed.
Open Library is a search tool that pulls data from Internet Archive. You might use it if that site (listed above) isn’t helping you find the right book. You can search hundreds of thousands of books here, and most are in multiple formats such as PDF, ePub, and Daisy.
I particularly like theLibrary Explorer section because it feels like I’m looking through real bookshelves!
You can search for ebooks specifically by checking theEbooks option after running a search.