Free books for the Kindle
A while back I broke down and bought the Amazon Kindle, which I love. I have been waiting for a perfect ebook reader since I would like to get rid of any material possessions that are not necessary. Let’s face it, books are pretty useless unless you’re actively reading them. Books are an inefficient medium in that they are heavy and take up a lot of space.
One of my goals is to reduce my material possessions to the absolute minimum. Like many people I no longer own CD’s for music (having sold them several years ago), but I have also been scanning in all paper records and photos and have sold a lot of furniture and junk on Craigslist. I would eventually like to get to the point where my possessions consist of: a car, some clothing, computing tools, and a few personal effects.
We should welcome the transition to digital books. With digital books, no book has to go out of print and we can further remove the obstacles for authorship. When books are not printed on dead trees, anyone can be an author and publisher.
Anything that is essentially information: video, audio, text, etc. should be freed from its physical prison, like a soul from the body. We should focus on creating better output devices to display words. The Kindle is a step in the right direction and it makes me excited for the future.
In an age of mass production and cheap materialism, we are seeing a trend of devaluing mass-produced items while growing to appreciate true artifacts. In the near future, wealth will be measured in freedom rather than material accumulation, so it will be less important to own things, especially now that most things are cheap. Our lives are becoming cluttered with crap because crap has become cheap and commonplace. We ship bales of used clothing to Africa because we simply have no desire or need for it.
Through the wonder of market capitalism, the average American has more material wealth than the wealthiest individual one hundred years ago. Think: air conditioning, cheap food, transportation, television, cheap textiles, etc. As things have become cheaper, they have become less important. We will declutter by transitioning to digital formats and by focusing on durable items of high quality or items that are high in artifact value.
As usual, I digress. I started this entry to show you how to find free ebooks using Google. For any title or author, including for works currently unavailable on the Kindle, do a Google search like so: “fountainhead filetype:pdf” or “allinurl:dune frank herbert filetype:txt”
If anyone has uploaded any of the books you are looking for to a web-accessible directory, chances are, Google knows about it. To get the book onto your Kindle, just email the file to your Kindle device email address and Amazon will convert it to the Kindle format and download to your Kindle.