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Kindle Nation Daily Free & Bargain Book Alert for Monday, March 15, 2010: Male Call – Hot Zone Book 1, by Denise A. Agnew, and Millions More!

“Warning: Contains explicit sex, some graphic language, and mild violence.”

It’s no surprise that — in addition to all the other wonderful benefits of the Kindle — the ereader is bringing plenty of attention the Kindle Books>Fiction>Erotica category in the Kindle Store. This latest free title is currently #347 overall in the Kindle Store, but it will probably make the top 10 before the sun sets tonight. Two other titles, Carolyn Faulkner’s Kept and our own Rena Diane Walmsley’s literary erotica novel Girl on Fire, have recently cracked the top 100 in the Kindle Store with prices under $3.

For a while there we were concerned that religious titles were dominating the free book listings in the Kindle Store. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. But apparently it’s no longer the case!

Here’s an excerpt from last week’s new release on the release of Girl on Fire:

Here She Is, a Miss America Contestant 
With a Sexy Kindle Bestseller That May Make You Blush! 

You may think that the latest erotic thriller to climb the bestseller list in Amazon’s Kindle ebook store has an unlikely author.

Girl on Fire, a cautionary, sexually explicit coming-of-age tale, was written right here in Massachusetts by Rena Diane Walmsley, who represented the state in the Miss America beauty pageant when she was 19.

“It would have made me blush in my contestant days, and I’m sure I would not have been alone,” says Walmsley today of her first novel. “The truth is that this novel might even have gotten me thrown out of the pageant, but more and more women are writing fiction that you might call ‘liberated,’ and the Kindle is the perfect place for an emerging novelist to break out whether she is writing in the erotica category or in some other genre.”

Indeed, the Kindle ebook reader is quickly becoming the digital equivalent of the “brown paper bag” for readers who prefer to play their reading choices close to the vest. With nearly half a million ebooks available in the Kindle Store, there are currently about 50 “erotica” titles among the top 2,000 Kindle bestsellers.

And Walmsley’s Girl on Fire is currently #3 on the Kindle’s “erotica” bestseller list, out of 11,987 titles in the category, as well as #6 on the “romantic suspense” list. Girl on Fire was released in the Kindle Store March 5, and will make its paperback debut with worldwide distribution, including Amazon.com, on March 26.

If Walmsley’s novel takes off, she would not be the first Miss America contestant from Massachusetts to make it as a novelist. Lisa Kleypas, who was Miss Massachusetts in 1985, has over two dozen novels in the Kindle Store.

Walmsley’s publisher for Girl on Fire, tiny Arlington-based Harvard Perspectives Press, provides this description for the novel in the copy that appears on the back cover of the forthcoming paperback:

Looking for love in all the right places? Not Alicia Wentworth, the enchantingly frisky teenaged heiress at the heart of Rena Diane Walmsley’s debut memoir-as-novel. Alicia escapes from her privileged, sheltered life at an elite Concord, Massachusetts boarding school and pulls a “visiting room switch” to break in to a nearby state prison so she can rendezvous with Teddy Hawk, an exquisitely chiseled 21-year-old Native American convict for whom she has fallen hard while volunteering in a creative writing class for inmates. But Alicia is left alone and vulnerable when Teddy is hauled off to solitary, and she must reach deep within herself to concoct a gritty and initially degrading scheme to blackmail the prison system into freeing them both.

This deliciously literate debut is framed by Alicia’s present-day perspective as “a respectable thirty-something Unitarian minister” in a suburb west of Boston: while she is cognizant of the scars she wears from her early experiences, she is also engaged by a sense of something sacred therein that informs her daily life years later.

Not all coming-of-age novels are alike, and not every thirty-something narrator is able to cast an unflinching eye on the choices she made and the chances she took at the cusp of adulthood. But Walmsley’s unique novel-as-memoir never blinks, and her stunning sexual description breaks new narrative ground on age-old but ever-engaging terrain. Women and men alike will be enchanted and enriched by their journeys through her ultimately cautionary web of words.

-30-

And, for the rest of the freebies in the Kindle Store, is a reprise of yesterday’s free book alert:

  • Originally posted March 15, 2010 – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010 
  • “Free” in the Kindle Store refers, for now, to the price for download to US-based Kindles. Amazon adds various charges for Kindles based beyond US borders. However, you can scroll down to Free Book Collections for over 1.8 million titles that can be downloaded free from the internet to Kindles anywhere in the world (use USB connection to avoid wireless charges.)

Product Details
from Touchstone Pictures (Kindle Edition – Mar. 15, 2010)Kindle Book
Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 15, 2010.

Dead Witch Walking (The Hollows, Book 1)


In addition to the several dozen free promotion books listed below, Amazon has just created a new direct gateway to over 2 million other free books that you can download easily to your Kindle. Here’s what you’ll find there:

With over 420,000 titles, the Kindle Store contains the largest selection of the books people want to read including New York Times® Best Sellers and most new releases at $9.99, unless otherwise marked. And Amazon provides thousands of the most popular classics for free including titles like The Adventures of Sherlock HolmesPride and Prejudice, and Treasure Island with more coming.
But of course, the Internet is huge and there are lots of older, out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books online. We wanted to make it easier to find these collections, which today represent nearly 2 million titles. See the sites and instructions below to download free classic and other out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books and transfer via USB to your Kindle device or read on Kindle for PC.
Note that these large collections of older free books are typically created from scanned copies of physical books and can have variable quality.
Amazon Kindle Store – Thousands of the most popular classics for free
The Amazon Kindle Store lets you choose from thousands of popular classics all available for free wireless delivery in under 60 seconds with Whispernet.
  1. Visit Kindle Popular Classics
  2. Search or browse for a title just like a normal Kindle book.
Internet Archive – Over 1.8 million free titles
Internet Archive is a non-profit dedicated to offering permanent access to historical collections that exist in digital format. Provides over 1.8 million free books to read, download, and enjoy.
  1. Visit archive.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse one of the sub-collections like ‘American Libraries’
  3. When viewing a title, click the link on the left labeled “Kindle (beta)” to download the file to your computer
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Project Gutenberg – Over 30,000 free titles
Project Gutenberg, one of the original sources of free electronic books, is dedicated to the creation and distribution of eBooks.
  1. Visit gutenberg.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse the ‘Book shelves by topic’
  3. When viewing a title, scroll down to the ‘Download this ebook for free’ section and click the download link for ‘Mobipocket’ or ‘Mobipocket with images’ format.
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Have you seen another great collection of free Kindle books on the web? Drop us a line.

How Should Independent Authors and Publishers Price eBooks?

Just a brief but, I hope, worthwhile follow-up my post earlier today about ebooks from the author’s perspective….

In Friday night’s conversation, and in an increasing number of other forums and conversations, I find that I am being asked for advice about how to price books in the Kindle Store. I generally share my thoughts on this topic quite freely, which is probably a good indicator of what they are worth, as advice.

But here are a few general observations.

Authors deserve to be paid well for their work, but it is a big mistake to equate the price that is set for that work blindly or simplistically with an author’s compensation. Instead, an author’s compensation is based on the following formula:

A x B x C
where  
A=the book’s price (usually but not always the suggested retail list price), 
B=the royalty percentage paid to the author (as opposed to “to the publisher” on the book, and 
C=the number of copies sold.

I realize that many or most of us are English majors, but that really shouldn’t keep us from absorbing and understanding this formula and its significance.

In a highly discretionary market such as the ebook market, where consumers are showing signs of being increasingly savvy and price-conscious, pricing a book too high will impede its sales. Indeed, as a number of authors including J.A. Konrath have pointed out, price sensitivity in the Kindle Store is intense. Konrath and other authors, including my co-panelists on Friday evening’s BookChatter podcast, have been finding out pretty consistently that the lower they set the prices for their books, down to the current Kindle Store floor of 99 cents for most titles, the more money they end up with via the AxBxC formula noted above.

To illustrate the concept, let’s take a hypothetical, fairly popular book with the title The Value of Nothing. It doesn’t matter whether it is a Buddhist spiritual tome, an inquiry into the price elasticity of demand, or a steamy erotic novel. (I made up the title, but of course I found afterward that there are two other books out there now with the same title, so apologies to Raj Patel and Julian Roche). Assuming that the book gets sufficient marketing attention and that there are no special forces at play such as pent up demand or early-adopter frenzy or the kind of impatience premium that is activated, say, with some bestselling sequels, my experience and observations say that the price that is set for the same book will have a dramatic effect on sales and ultimate author receipts along lines like these over, say, the course of a month:

Price    Units Sold    Author Receipts
$14.99    60               $314.79
$12.99    90               $409.19
$9.99    150               $524.48
$6.99    300               $733.95
$4.99    600             $1,047.90
$2.99    1500            $1,569.75
$1.99    3000            $2,089.50
$0.99    7500            $2,598.75
$0.00    30000               $0.00

So, no promises that it will be replicated in any other author’s experience, but I just think it is important to share this rough model that I have seen work again and again. And I am sharing it in spite of the fact that I would rather, personally, see most author and publishers price Kindle books generally at $2.99 and up.

I’m sure there are plenty of other reasons why an author or publisher might wish to charge more for a book, and I am not going to extend this post unduly by trying to evaluate them. If you are concerned about saturating your market at too low a price, one thing that makes the Kindle Store — and the aggregate of all ebook venues — stand out right now is the rate at which the “installed base” of Kindles is growing. Even if an author has sold 50,000 copies of a Kindle book up to now, there are still 3 million other Kindle owners who have not bought that book yet, and that base is expected to grow by an average of a quarter of a million new Kindles a month this year, even before we count iPads, BlackBerry phones, and all the other devices that will be able to read Kindle books or other ebook formats.

One thing to keep in mind is that Amazon has promised that by June 30 it will double its Kindle royalties from 35 percent to 70 percent for authors and publishers who price their Kindle editions anywhere from $2.99 to $9.99 and participate in other Kindle feature offerings such as the text-to-speech offering. That’s a powerful lure: it would mean a per-unit royalty increase from 35 cents (on a 99-cent offering) to $1.99 (on a $2.99 offering). It could well be that, when this new royalty structure kicks in, Amazon will succeed as herding all the “cats” who currently have Kindle books priced from 99 cents up to $2.98 into the $2.99-$9.99 corral.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Sunday, March 14, 2010: Exclusive Free Kindle Content for "The Last Song" from Touchstone Pictures, Take One (Above The Line Series #1), and Millions More!

  • Originally posted March 14, 2010 – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010 
  • “Free” in the Kindle Store refers, for now, to the price for download to US-based Kindles. Amazon adds various charges for Kindles based beyond US borders. However, you can scroll down to Free Book Collections for over 1.8 million titles that can be downloaded free from the internet to Kindles anywhere in the world (use USB connection to avoid wireless charges.)

Product Details
from Touchstone Pictures (Kindle Edition – Mar. 15, 2010)Kindle Book
Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 15, 2010.

Dead Witch Walking (The Hollows, Book 1)


In addition to the several dozen free promotion books listed below, Amazon has just created a new direct gateway to over 2 million other free books that you can download easily to your Kindle. Here’s what you’ll find there:

With over 420,000 titles, the Kindle Store contains the largest selection of the books people want to read including New York Times® Best Sellers and most new releases at $9.99, unless otherwise marked. And Amazon provides thousands of the most popular classics for free including titles like The Adventures of Sherlock HolmesPride and Prejudice, and Treasure Island with more coming.
But of course, the Internet is huge and there are lots of older, out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books online. We wanted to make it easier to find these collections, which today represent nearly 2 million titles. See the sites and instructions below to download free classic and other out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books and transfer via USB to your Kindle device or read on Kindle for PC.
Note that these large collections of older free books are typically created from scanned copies of physical books and can have variable quality.
Amazon Kindle Store – Thousands of the most popular classics for free
The Amazon Kindle Store lets you choose from thousands of popular classics all available for free wireless delivery in under 60 seconds with Whispernet.
  1. Visit Kindle Popular Classics
  2. Search or browse for a title just like a normal Kindle book.
Internet Archive – Over 1.8 million free titles
Internet Archive is a non-profit dedicated to offering permanent access to historical collections that exist in digital format. Provides over 1.8 million free books to read, download, and enjoy.
  1. Visit archive.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse one of the sub-collections like ‘American Libraries’
  3. When viewing a title, click the link on the left labeled “Kindle (beta)” to download the file to your computer
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Project Gutenberg – Over 30,000 free titles
Project Gutenberg, one of the original sources of free electronic books, is dedicated to the creation and distribution of eBooks.
  1. Visit gutenberg.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse the ‘Book shelves by topic’
  3. When viewing a title, scroll down to the ‘Download this ebook for free’ section and click the download link for ‘Mobipocket’ or ‘Mobipocket with images’ format.
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Have you seen another great collection of free Kindle books on the web? Drop us a line.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Saturday, March 13, 2010: Three New Pre-Orders, and Millions More!

  • Originally posted March 13, 2010 – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010 
  • “Free” in the Kindle Store refers, for now, to the price for download to US-based Kindles. Amazon adds various charges for Kindles based beyond US borders. However, you can scroll down to Free Book Collections for over 1.8 million titles that can be downloaded free from the internet to Kindles anywhere in the world (use USB connection to avoid wireless charges.)

 

The Dark Tide (Free for a Limited Time – With Bonus Material) by Andrew Gross (Kindle Edition – Mar. 23, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $0.00
Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 23, 2010.

Rides a Dread Legion Free with Bonus Material by Raymond E. Feist (Kindle Edition – Mar. 23, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $0.00
Stopping Time, Part 1 by Melissa Marr (Kindle Edition – Mar. 16, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $0.00

Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 16, 2010.

Product Details

Product Details


In addition to the several dozen free promotion books listed below, Amazon has just created a new direct gateway to over 2 million other free books that you can download easily to your Kindle. Here’s what you’ll find there:

With over 420,000 titles, the Kindle Store contains the largest selection of the books people want to read including New York Times® Best Sellers and most new releases at $9.99, unless otherwise marked. And Amazon provides thousands of the most popular classics for free including titles like The Adventures of Sherlock HolmesPride and Prejudice, and Treasure Island with more coming.
But of course, the Internet is huge and there are lots of older, out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books online. We wanted to make it easier to find these collections, which today represent nearly 2 million titles. See the sites and instructions below to download free classic and other out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books and transfer via USB to your Kindle device or read on Kindle for PC.
Note that these large collections of older free books are typically created from scanned copies of physical books and can have variable quality.
Amazon Kindle Store – Thousands of the most popular classics for free
The Amazon Kindle Store lets you choose from thousands of popular classics all available for free wireless delivery in under 60 seconds with Whispernet.
  1. Visit Kindle Popular Classics
  2. Search or browse for a title just like a normal Kindle book.
Internet Archive – Over 1.8 million free titles
Internet Archive is a non-profit dedicated to offering permanent access to historical collections that exist in digital format. Provides over 1.8 million free books to read, download, and enjoy.
  1. Visit archive.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse one of the sub-collections like ‘American Libraries’
  3. When viewing a title, click the link on the left labeled “Kindle (beta)” to download the file to your computer
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Project Gutenberg – Over 30,000 free titles
Project Gutenberg, one of the original sources of free electronic books, is dedicated to the creation and distribution of eBooks.
  1. Visit gutenberg.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse the ‘Book shelves by topic’
  3. When viewing a title, scroll down to the ‘Download this ebook for free’ section and click the download link for ‘Mobipocket’ or ‘Mobipocket with images’ format.
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Have you seen another great collection of free Kindle books on the web? Drop us a line.

Kindle Store Bargains **Over** $9.99? What’s Up with That?!

If you’ve gotten into the habit of avoiding all Kindle titles that are priced above $9.99, you may be missing out on some bargains. Really, I’m serious….


Product Details
Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set by Charlaine Harris (Kindle Edition – Sept. 29, 2009) – Kindle Book
Buy$31.96
Auto-delivered wirelessly
Product Details
The Twilight Saga Collection by Stephenie Meyer (Kindle Edition – Oct. 27, 2009) – Kindle Book
Buy$33.20
Auto-delivered wirelessly
Product Details
The Lord of the Rings (Trilogy) by J.R.R. Tolkien (Kindle Edition – Apr. 19, 2009) – Kindle Book
Buy$12.24
Auto-delivered wirelessly
Product Details
One-Click Buy: March 2010 Harlequin Presents by Trish Morey (Kindle Edition – Mar. 1, 2010) – Kindle Book
Buy$16.50
Auto-delivered wirelessly

Product Details
One-Click Buy: March 2010 Silhouette Desire by Jules Bennett (Kindle Edition – Mar. 1, 2010) – Kindle Book
Buy$11.99
Auto-delivered wirelessly

Product Details
One-Click Buy: March 2010 Harlequin Blaze by Bonnie Edwards (Kindle Edition – Mar. 1, 2010) – Kindle Book
Buy$11.99
Auto-delivered wirelessly

Product Details
One-Click Buy: February 2010 Harlequin Presents by Caitlin Crews (Kindle Edition – Feb. 1, 2010) – Kindle Book
Buy$18.50
Auto-delivered wirelessly

Product Details
One-Click Buy: February 2010 Harlequin Blaze by Lori Borrill (Kindle Edition – Feb. 1, 2010) – Kindle Book
Buy$11.99
Auto-delivered wirelessly


Product Details
One-Click Buy: February 2010 Silhouette Desire by Rachel Bailey (Kindle Edition – Feb. 1, 2010) – Kindle Book
Buy$11.99
Auto-delivered wirelessly


Some Indications of Rising Kindle Store Prices and Tentative Willingness Among Kindle Owners to Pay More Than $9.99 for New Releases

A little over two weeks ago, on February 25, I shared a post here with a breakdown of Kindle Store books by price range. The breakdown of the 447,000 titles in the Kindle Store at the time was as follows, as of February 25, 2010:

  • 19,795 Kindle Books Priced “Free” (4.42%) 
  • 3,023 Titles Priced from a Penny to 98 Cents (0.67%) 
  • 36,370 Kindle Books Priced at 99 Cents (8.12%) 
  • 62,275 Kindle Books Priced from $1 to $2.99 (13.9%) 
  • 87,722 Kindle Books Priced from $3 to $4.99 (19.58%) 
  • 81,230 Titles Priced from $5 to $9.98 (18.13%) 
  • 55,269 Titles Priced at $9.99 (12.34%) 
  • 5,139 Titles Priced from $10 to $12.99 (1.15%) 
  • 9,331 Titles Priced from $13 to $14.99 (2.08%) 
  • 87,771 Titles Priced at $15 and Up (19.59%)

Since then, as we approach the advent of the so-called agency model by which some of the major publishers intend to mandate (rather than “suggest”) retail ebook prices to Amazon and other ebook retailers, we are beginning to see some small trends of change. There have been no real signs of change under the $9.99 price point, other than a decrease in the number of titles priced between a penny and 98 cents, which is probably a result of Amazon exercising some quality control over pubic domain titles and pushing small publishers toward the Kindle Digital Text Platform and away from MobiPocket as a publishing platform. Here’s the first part of the breakdown of the 463,000 ebooks in the Kindle Store as of today, March 10, 2010:

But the percentage of books listed at $9.99 has slipped from 12.34% to 11.59%, and the percentage of books listed between $10 and $14.99 has increased from 3.23% to 4.21%. Nothing huge, but probably a significant trend in this balance of the breakdown as of today, March 10, 2010:

There may also be the beginning of a trend if change in the composition of the Kindle Store top 100 list. As of today, we see the following breakdown of the top 100 bestselling ebooks in the Kindle Store:
  • 50 priced at $0.00 
  • 1 priced from $0.01 to $0.98
  • 0 priced at $0.99
  • 1 priced from $1 to $2.99
  • 10 priced from $3 to $4.99
  • 15 priced from $5 to $9.98
  • 18 priced at $9.99
  • 2 priced from $10 to $12.99
  • 2 priced from $13 to $14.99
  • 1 priced at $15 and up
Although the number of free titles in the top 100 has declined from late December and early January, this seems less a matter of changed behavior than the clearly observable pattern that shows a higher preponderance of free books among the bestsellers in periods immediately following a high-volume shipping period for new Kindles, as we witnessed with the 2009 holiday season.
The more significant pattern may be the fact that there are 5 titles priced between $12.61 and $15.37 in the top 100. Although we have reported in the past on our survey results that show strong resistance among Kindle owners to paying more than $9.99 for new release bestsellers, there are growing indications that this resistance is far from absolute. Regardless of my own editorial views here, I will continue to report objectively on what is actually happening in the ebook price wars. I don’t have enough in the way of past datapoints to conclude too much here, but this does look to me like the beginning of a trend. 
Stay tuned.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Sunday, March 7, 2010: Sushi for One? , and Millions More!

Product Details
Sushi for One? by Camy Tang

Product Details


In addition to the several dozen free promotion books listed below, Amazon has just created a new direct gateway to over 2 million other free books that you can download easily to your Kindle. Here’s what you’ll find there:

With over 420,000 titles, the Kindle Store contains the largest selection of the books people want to read including New York Times® Best Sellers and most new releases at $9.99, unless otherwise marked. And Amazon provides thousands of the most popular classics for free including titles like The Adventures of Sherlock HolmesPride and Prejudice, and Treasure Island with more coming.
But of course, the Internet is huge and there are lots of older, out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books online. We wanted to make it easier to find these collections, which today represent nearly 2 million titles. See the sites and instructions below to download free classic and other out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books and transfer via USB to your Kindle device or read on Kindle for PC.
Note that these large collections of older free books are typically created from scanned copies of physical books and can have variable quality.
Amazon Kindle Store – Thousands of the most popular classics for free
The Amazon Kindle Store lets you choose from thousands of popular classics all available for free wireless delivery in under 60 seconds with Whispernet.
  1. Visit Kindle Popular Classics
  2. Search or browse for a title just like a normal Kindle book.
Internet Archive – Over 1.8 million free titles
Internet Archive is a non-profit dedicated to offering permanent access to historical collections that exist in digital format. Provides over 1.8 million free books to read, download, and enjoy.
  1. Visit archive.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse one of the sub-collections like ‘American Libraries’
  3. When viewing a title, click the link on the left labeled “Kindle (beta)” to download the file to your computer
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Project Gutenberg – Over 30,000 free titles
Project Gutenberg, one of the original sources of free electronic books, is dedicated to the creation and distribution of eBooks.
  1. Visit gutenberg.org 
  2. Search for a title or browse the ‘Book shelves by topic’
  3. When viewing a title, scroll down to the ‘Download this ebook for free’ section and click the download link for ‘Mobipocket’ or ‘Mobipocket with images’ format.
  4. Attach your Kindle to your computer using your USB cable and drag the file to the “Documents” folder on your Kindle. You can also e-mail the file to your Kindle using Whispernet for wireless delivery (charges apply).
  5. Open the book from your Kindle’s home screen and enjoy.
Have you seen another great collection of free Kindle books on the web? Drop us a line.