Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Saturday, March 6, 2010: How to Download 2 Million Free Books from the Internet Archive, the Kindle Store, and Project Gutenberg

Thanks  to Kindle Nation Citizen Paul D for sending in this two-pronged question about how to highlight or otherwise save our December 31 post with step-by-step instructions for how to locate and download 1.8 million free books from the Internet Archive directly to the Kindle:

I wanted to highlight a passage from your blog outlining how to DL a book from Archive.org so I could keep it handy for  later  reference.  For some reason I could not.  Is this feature blocked out on Blogs?


Thanks,

Paul

Paul, I’m going to break this into two separate posts, in the hope that it will be more helpful and easier to locate for future reference that way.

First, yes: highlighting and some other annotation features are, unfortunately, currently unavailable on Kindle edition blogs, but in my next post I will discuss some worthwhile work-arounds.

Second, in this post,  I’ll re-post the steps on how to download any of over two million free titles of Kindle-formatted content from the Kindle Store, the Internet Archive, and Project Gutenberg, from Amazon’s gateway page to free content for the Kindle.

Third, I’ll provide a link and paste the text below to my 2009 post on how to use the Internet Archive with the Kindle for PC App.

So here are Amazon’s instructions:

* 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.

And here’s my December 31, 2009 post:
Free Today to Download to Your Kindle or Kindle for PC Within Seconds: OVER A MILLION BOOKS FROM THE INTERNET ARCHIVE

First, sorry about the caps. I don’t mean to shout. I just wanted to make sure, whether you’ve had your Kindle for two years or two hours, or are just trying to make a decision about getting a Kindle or some other eReader that claims to to have access to a million books, that you don’t miss this.


Several times a week I post here about free books or bargain books that are available in the Kindle Store. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. A lot gets said about the Kindle being a “closed system,” and it is certainly true that most commercially published books in the Kindle Store come with DRM restrictions. As I will discuss again in a forthcoming post, it’s important for that to change as soon as possible, but there is another sense in which the Kindle, as hardware, is a very open device, able to read texts from a wide array of sources, and those capacities are expanding dramatically as everyone from free digital book sources to authors and publishers takes whatever steps are necessary to ensure that their content is able to shake hands and play nice with the Kindle. Why wouldn’t they?


Thanks to the work of Brewster Kahle and the many volunteers and staff at the Internet Archive, now you can easily find and download well over a million free books from Archive.org to your Kindle. I’ve been meaning to share a post about this with you for a couple of weeks, but I was waiting for the Kindle for Mac App so that I could make the step-by-step instructions more straightforward. But I know that there are hundreds of thousands of new Kindle owners out there wanting to learn about new ways to get the most out of their Kindles, and if you have a three- or four-day weekend coming up, you just may be able to find the time to start putting a new Kindle through some of its more beneficial paces. So let us tarry no longer.


First, what’s the Internet Archive? You can read more about it here at Wikipedia, but basically it’s a nonprofit organization, founded in 1996 by Brewster Kahle, dedicated to building and maintaining a free and openly accessible online digital library, including texts, film, music and other audio recordings, software, and an archive of the World Wide Web. If you’ve been hearing a lot about the claims of Google Books, you may be surprised to learn that Google has not come close yet to what the Internet Archive has done in making over a million titles easy to find, search, browse, and download in a variety of user-friendly formats including, most recently, the Kindle-compatible MOBI format.


Over a million? Yes, I’m not kidding. Here are the specific libraries featured at the Internet Archive, and the vast majority of these titles are available in that Kindle-compatible MOBI format:



That’s well over a million and a half, but there are always duplicates and a few titles that may not yet be available in MOBI format, so we’ll just satisfy ourselves with saying “over a million.” If you love to read, from the classics to arcane research texts to contemporary texts of all kinds, you may be amazed at how easy it is to use the Internet Archive with your Kindle — certainly much easier and more user-friendly than trying to find and transfer a specific free ebook with Google Books. (A little ironic, that Google should be so challenged when it comes to enabling user-friendly search on its own book app, no?) The usefulness of this archive is limited only by the boundaries of your own imagination and willingness to search for what you want to read. 


But for starters, here are the steps, and they may take you as long as 30 seconds or so!


For PC Users


Here are the steps if you are using a PC:

  • Click here to download the Kindle for PC App if you have not done so already.
  • Click here to go to the Texts portion of the Internet Archive.
  • Look around the main page to select the first free book you’d like to download. You might choose a frequently downloaded title such as Amusements in Mathematics or Henry James’ An international episode, or you may prefer to enter a few keywords so that you can find Carlos Baker’s Hemingway biography or a delightful old book of children’s rhymes.
  • Click on the hyperlinked title you select, and at the left of that book’s detail page you’ll see a box showing the formats in which the text is available for reading. Click on Kindle (beta).
  • The ebook that you have selected should begin downloading to your computer immediately, and if you have downloaded your Kindle for PC App as noted above the text will open in your Kindle for PC App, usually in just a few seconds.
  • Take a look at the text you’ve downloaded in your Kindle for PC App to make sure that you’ve got what you want, and if so you can connect your Kindle to your PC via your Kindle’s USB cable and  drag the title from your PC’s “My Kindle Content” folder to your Kindle’s “documents” folder.
  • Once you’ve ejected the Kindle from your PC (and disconnected the USB cable, if you like), you should find the new file on your Kindle Home screen and you can select it with your 5-way controller (or, on Kindle 1, your scrollwheel) to begin reading, annotating, or even listening to it via Kindle text-to-speech.

For Mac Users


Once Amazon launches its too-long awaited Kindle for Mac App, the steps for Mac users should be very nearly similar to the steps shown above for the PC. Until then, if you are downloading a title to your Kindle via your Mac, just follow these steps:

  • Click here to go to the Texts portion of the Internet Archive.
  • Look around the main page to select the first free book you’d like to download. You might choose a frequently downloaded title such as Amusements in Mathematics or Henry James’ An international episode, or you may prefer to enter a few keywords so that you can find Carlos Baker’s Hemingway biography or a delightful old book of children’s rhymes.
  • Click on the hyperlinked title you select, and at the left of that book’s detail page you’ll see a box showing the formats in which the text is available for reading. Click on Kindle (beta).
  • The ebook that you have selected should begin downloading to your Mac immediately.
  • Connect your Kindle to your Mac via your Kindle’s USB cable and use Finder to drag the title from your Mac (you’ll probably find it in “Downloads,” Desktop,” or “Documents”) to your Kindle’s “documents” folder.
  • Once you’ve ejected the Kindle from your Mac (and disconnected the USB cable, if you like), you should find the new file on your Kindle Home screen and you can select it with your 5-way controller (or, on Kindle 1, your scrollwheel) to begin reading, annotating, or even listening to it via Kindle text-to-speech.

Hope that helps, and, like I said, check the next post for some tips on saving a post like this for future reference.

Why is Wiley Trying to Suffocate Kindle Sales of "No One Would Listen"?

By Stephen Windwalker
Originally posted March 5, 2010 – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010
 

John Wiley & Sons is not owned by any of the Apple Five or Big Six publishers. It is not owned by some global corporation based in Germany. It’s a very successful publicly traded US publishing company that has been around for over two hundred years and is based in humble Hoboken. Wiley is known primarily as a publisher of academic, business, and technical books, many of which have traditionally brought prices that are higher than the usual trade book prices for bestselling hardcovers or new releases generally whether in hardcover or paperback. Many of these titles sell briskly, but it is fairly uncommon for a Wiley title to crack the top 100 titles in the Amazon sales rankings.

But now Wiley has a tiger by the tail in Harry Markopolos’ new book No One Would Listen: A True Financial Thriller, the story of the whistle-blower who five times delivered the goods to the SEC on Bernard Madoff in an unsuccessful effort to get the regulators to shut down the $50 billion plus Ponzi scheme. The book is likely to sit high on the financial besteller lists for months, and just three days after its release it is currently sitting at #31 on the overall Amazon bestseller list. Amazon is discounting the hardcover by a pretty standard rate of 42% from $27.95 to $16.34, and the result of the discount and the fact that Wiley has brought out a timely, well-told true story is that the publisher probably has its most successful book of 2010.

But the Kindle edition is not doing anywhere near as well. It’s sitting right now at #156 in the Kindle Store. Why?

It’s pretty simple. Wiley is apparently marching in step with other big publishers by setting the book’s Kindle list price at $27.95. For the first couple of days after it was released the actual Kindle price was $13.83, which made it one of the most expensive new releases in the Kindle Store and dramatically chilled initial sales that might help to create buzz for a new release. But apparently that $13.83 price wasn’t high enough, because as of this morning the actual “discounted” Kindle price has been raised 88 cents to $14.71. The book is being highlighted as “New and Noteworthy” in prime Kindle Store real estate, but, well, Kindle owners are very resistant to being charged hardcover prices for a license to read an ebook.

You would think, at Wiley, there would be a few executives sitting around who had read enough of Wiley’s own books that they would understand the economic laws of price elasticity and demand.

But without getting too academic or theoretical here ourselves, three things seems relatively clear:

  1. If the Kindle edition of No One Would Listen: A True Financial Thriller were priced at $9.99, it would be selling more than twice as many Kindle copies as it is selling at the current price of $14.71.
  2. Rather than cannibalizing sales of the hardcover edition, the Kindle edition sales would actually fuel strong hardcover sales by creating more buzz and a higher overall position on various Amazon bestseller lists.
  3. Markopolos, who never received anything but stress for his efforts to blow the whistle on Madoff, would be doing far better with regard to royalties if Wiley weren’t trying so hard to suppress sales of the Kindle edition of his book.

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 Holmes, Pride 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.


Updated Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Wednesday, March 3, 2010: New Religious Fiction, Dozens of Free Promotional Titles, and a New "Free Book Collections" Gateway to Over 2 Million Other Free Books!

  • Originally posted March 3, 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.)


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 Holmes, Pride 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 Wednesday, March 3, 2010: Dozens of Free Promotional Titles, and a New "Free Book Collections" Gateway to Over 2 Million Other Free Books!

Originally posted March 3, 2010 – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010 

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. Thanks to Bufo at ILMK Andrys at A Kindle World for the heads up. 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 Holmes, Pride 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.


Keep scrolling down for the latest free promotions in the Kindle Store:


  Product Details 

Edge of Apocalypse Free Preview

When Night Falls

About eBook Prices and Author Royalties: Price Elasticity and the Demand for Books

By Stephen Windwalker
Originally posted March 2, 2010 – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010

Chris B, a reader from the Dallas area, got right to the heart of one of the challenges of thinking about the effects of the ebook pricing controversy on authors in this comment left yesterday on my post The Math of Publishing a Book in Print or Electronic Format:

When you put the “author royalties” of the 9.99 version as 2.50, realize that few authors ever make more than a few thousand dollars on a book. A $3 difference in sale price is not going to decide whether a book hits the NYT bestseller list (and makes some real money), but it might make a difference in feeding the author’s kids for another month.

I don’t want to see Kindle books go up in price, but we have to be realistic about it. We’ve always known Amazon was selling books at an artificially low price to do that.

Believe me, I do not want any authors’ kids, including my own, to miss their three squares a day. In fact, I think it’s important to save some authors from themselves here. While Motoko Rich’s New York Times piece and my post drill down on the pricing and costs of an individual book as they might play out for a hardcover print run of 15,000 copies, it’s impossible to think intelligently about the effects of these economics on an author without serious contemplation of the number of copies sold.

So, fair warning:

 Discussion of Price Elasticity Ahead

The economic law of demand states basically that “if the price of a product increases, the quantity demanded decreases, while if price of the product decreases, its quantity demanded increases.” This price elasticity of demand is most pronounced when it is accompanied by three conditions:

  • the product represents a discretionary purchase rather than a necessity;
  • the product is one out of many choices available to consumers to meet a particular interest or want; and 
  • the product is available to consumers without much marketplace friction, i.e., it can be purchased without significant outlay of travel, shipping, time, or other accompanying expenditure.

With millions of titles available in multiple formats, it is obvious that books meet these conditions about as well as any type of product, for most consumers. And all marketplace friction vanishes completely once a consumer has access to ebooks either through ownership of a Kindle or competitor’s ebook reader or by being able to run a Kindle App on a PC, BlackBerry, iPhone, iPod Touch, or other device.

The result is that readers pay close attention to what they have to pay for books. Many wait for paperback availability of their favorite authors’ titles rather than pay a premium for the opportunity to read those books in hardcover a few months earlier. For those trade paperback copies, the author’s royalty is usually little more than a dollar per copy, far less than half of the average hardcover royalty of $3.90 referenced in the Motoko Rich piece. So that’s one form of price elasticity of demand.

Another kind of price elasticity of demand comes into play where ebook prices are concerned.

The recent Winter 2010 Kindle Nation Citizen Survey showed evidence that Kindle owners have become more price-conscious as a result of the recent ebook pricing controversy and are very resistant to paying more than $9.99 for an ebook: 75 percent of the 1,892 respondents identified with the statement that “I’ll pay over $9.99, but only rarely when I simply must have an ebook.”

As of this morning there are 102,160 titles priced at $10 and up in the U.S. Kindle Store, or about 22 percent of the overall total of 451,317 ebooks in the store. None of those $10-and-up titles are currently ranked among the top 40 Kindle bestsellers, and only four are ranked between 41 and 100. 13 of the top 100 are priced at $9.99.

So, if an author’s royalty is $2.50 for a Kindle book priced at $9.99, and $3.25 for a Kindle book priced at $12.99, let’s do the math. If the book sells 30 percent more copies when priced at $9.99 than it sells when priced at $12.99, the author’s royalties are at break-even and her readership — people might buy her other books — is significantly larger. Indeed, from what I have seen, the sales differential is probably more like 50 to 100 percent, and some of the most successful Kindle authors are making far more than the “few thousand dollars” referenced in Chris’ comment by pricing their books below $9.99.

Of course, the same percentages and competitive-pricing benefits that are available to authors ought to apply to publishers, were it not for the likelihood — evident from the industry sources quoted in Rich’s article and in numerous comments by publishing insiders throughout the recent ebook pricing controversy — that publishers are trying to reverse the Kindle Revolution. As publishing consultant Mike Shatzkin told Rich: “The simplest way to slow down e-books is not to make them too cheap.”

If that’s the case, it also seems likely that an increasing number of those midlist authors — those of us who have to pay close attention to “feeding [our] kids for another month” — will be forced to consider another offer that Amazon has put on the table for us: the possibility of receiving direct royalties of 70% by going “around” the publisher and dealing directly with the Kindle platform for ebooks priced between $2.99 and $9.99.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Tuesday, March 2, 2010: Battle Of The Network Zombies, Dozens of Free Promotional Titles, and a Link to All 20,144 Kindle Freebies

Wolf Signs: Granite Lake Wolves, Book 1

Edge of Apocalypse Free Preview

When Night Falls