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Book sites where you can read books.

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bc7683023 | 14:49 Mon 26th Jul 2010 | Arts & Literature
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Is this legal? Is this not kind of like listening to music or watching videos without paying? Because surely if someone has uploaded a book than the Author will lose out as you don't need to purchase it. Does anyone know?
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Displaying the text of a book on a website, without the author's permission, is an unlawful breach of copyright.

Nobody can stop you reading it.
Question Author
So there are sites where the authors have given permission for the full book to be viewed? Do you know of any?
you have heard of libraries i take it...
many authors are dead; copyright doesn't last forever, though the heirs of Walt Disney are trying to get it to do so.
Joggerjayne is correct. The only exception is where the author has been dead for more than (I think) 75 years - this is if they haven't signed over publishing rights. For instance, J M Barrie bequeathed the copyright (and thus all royalties) of 'Peter Pan' to Great Ormond Street Hospital.

But even given the 75 year rule, you still cannot reproduce later editions. For example, 'Pride and Prejudice' is long out of copyright and you could set up as a publisher and publish your own edition of it for sale or FOC. What you wouldn't be allowed to do is to scan, say, a twenty-year-old Penguin edition and distribute that.

The only sites I know of where current authors allow their books to be read FOC are the various writing websites and blogs. Authonomy is one such. You won't find any established authors on there but you may just come across the next bestseller. The site is owned by a large publishing house and they occasionally pick up new authors from there. It's like an online slush pile.

As JJ also says, if you find unauthorised texts uploaded, nobody can stop you downloading and reading them (actually, downloading may be illegal - not sure). But authors get precious little back on the cover price of a book in any case - often less than 10%, and that's if they're lucky. They make much of their money from workshops and personal appearances. And for every Dan Brown and James Patterson out there, there are probably a hundred more who are lucky to make a few thousand quid a year out of what they do.

As a wannabe bestselling author myself, I just think it's unfair. It's the literary equivalent of handling stolen goods. I mean, if you invented something and patented it, then someone pinched your stock and began to give it away, you'd rightly feel a bit miffed.

Libraries are mostly free, and many are now moving into the area of ebook downloads, so it's worth seeing what yours can offer.
Is it legal?

It depends. If the book is out of copyright, it's perfectly legal. Take a look at http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page where there is a great collection of out of copyright work available to read/download. Some authors/publishers also allow short stories and sometimes full novels to be published on the web as a loss leader/taster - often for a limited time. I recently got the first in the "Temeraire" series - think the Napoleonic war but with dragons - on such an offer. Also, some libraries apparently offer a web service.

However if this isn't done "officially" you are quite right, it is both illegal and unfair to the authors. If, for instance, you know of a site with all the latest bestsellers on offer to read/download then it's not going to be legal.
Question Author
Thanks a lot everyone some great information.
Project Gutenberg is a very good source - they only have out of copyright on there so it's perfectly safe to download. The whole thinking behind Gutenberg is to put some of the rarer stuff into the public domain.

They have a pretty useful selection of sheet music on there too.
Gutenberg Press is the bees knees. 33,000 books available for free download, none breaching anyone's copyright.

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