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Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert: Start with Inkmesh to Find and Download Over a Hundred Free Books from Baen

Baen Books is a well-respected indie science fiction publisher that has been around for over 25 years, and the company has been in the forefront among publishers who understand and play well with the ebook revolution.

Baen regularly offers free promotional ebooks in a very successful effort to inspire reader interest in other books that are offered for a price, and the publisher is currently offering over 100 free Kindle-compatible books from its website. In every case they are:

  • easy to find;
  • easy to download to your PC or Mac;
  • easy to transfer to your Kindle; and
  • easy to read on your Kindle, Kindle for PC, or Kindle for Mac.

Before you start, if you are going to download any of these books to your computer, make sure that you have downloaded and registered the Kindle for PC or Kindle for Mac app to your computer; it’s free, easy, and it will make it easier for you to manage and organize free book downloads like these in the future. You can find links for all of the Kindle’s current and future free device apps downloads in the left sidebar on this Kindle Store page.

I recommend starting with this Inkmesh link to find the list of free books from Baen: http://bit.ly/FreeBaenBks. Once you see the Inkmesh list on the screen of your PC or Mac (as in the screenshot at right), just follow these steps:

  • Right-click or COMMAND+click on a title that interests you.
  • On the individual title’s Inkmesh detail screen, click on the link in the line that reads “Get it from Baen WebScriptions for free!”
  • On the book’s Baen Books page, you will have a choice between emailing the book directly to your Kindle via the Whispernet, which in virtually all cases involving a Kindle located in the U.S. will cost you 15 cents for Amazon’s email services, or downloading it for free to your computer in a pre-formatted Kindle-compatible file provided by Baen.
  • If you choose to download the book to your computer just click on the link that looks like this under the heading “Download Unzipped Files.” You also have the option of downloading a zipped file, but at today’s download speeds this seems an unnecessary step given that most ebook files are far less than a megabyte. The download should begin immediately with the usual caveats about making sure you trust the source of the file. Baen’s been around twice as long as Amazon and is deserving of your trust.
  • If you are downloading a book to your Kindle for PC or Kindle for Mac app for the first time, you may be prompted to select the application that you choose to have open “files like this,” and you should select the Kindle for PC or Kindle for Mac app. Once you’ve made this selection and responded appropriately to prompts along the way, your copy of the ebook will open in the Kindle app environment right on your computer. 
  • Once you take a look at the ebook and decide that you want to be able to read it on your Kindle, if you have a Kindle, just connect the Kindle to your computer via USB, locate the book file in your “My Kindle Content” folder within your computer’s “My Documents” folder (or a similarly named folder), and you can drag and drop it easily into your Kindle’s documents folder.
  • If you choose to email the book directly to your Kindle, click on the “Email book to my Kindle” and you’ll see a pop-up screen like the one at the right, prompting you to add the address suffix @webscription.net to your “Your Kindle approved e-mail list”on your Amazon Kindle Manger [sic], by which they actually mean your Manage Your Kindle page at Amazon.com. Once you take these steps, enter the address for your Kindle device in the appropriate field and click “Send,” you should see a message like this one, and the book should show up on your Kindle’s Home screen:

The file [northworld_trilogy.mobi] was sent to your Kindle at [you@kindle.com]

Good luck!

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Monday, March 22, 2010: A New Amazon Book on How to Publish a Kindle Book, and Over 2 Million Other Free Books!

Downloading? Uploading? More and more Kindle owners are doing both, and this morning Amazon has launched a new free book that is clearly aimed at encouraging thousands of established, emerging, and brand new authors to publish their work directly on the Kindle platform. This is a very brief and rudimentary introduction to using the Kindle Digital Text Platform, but it makes sense for Amazon to use a free ebook to help build interest among current and prospective authors.

Product Details
by Amazon.com (Kindle Edition – Mar. 14, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $0.00
“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.
 

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Sunday, March 21, 2010: Pre-Order of Melissa Marr’s Bestselling Urban Faery Debut, Wicked Lovely with Free Bonus Material

Related post: Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Saturday March 20, 2010: Dozens of Free Promotional Titles, and a “Free Book Collections” Gateway to Over 2 Million Other Free Books!

Click here (or type “kindle nation daily” in your Kindle’s Kindle Store search field) to have Free Book Alerts pushed directly to your Kindle 24/7 with a 14-day free trial to the Kindle edition of Kindle Nation Daily, the #1 bestselling blog in the Kindle Store


“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.)

 
Bestselling teen author Melissa Marr has been dabbling in the territory of promoting her other books by offering free promotions in the Kindle Store, and it has been working very well for her:

  • Her story Stopping Time (Part One), currently free, is #15 on the Kindle Store bestseller list as I type this, and Stopping Time (Part Two) is free for pre-order to be released on Tuesday.
  • Her Wicked Lovely series of three other books, Wicked Lovely, Ink Exchange, and Fragile Eternity are each in the top 1 percent of all books on the Kindle Store bestseller lists.
  • Unbound, the HarperCollins anthology in paperback and Kindle edition that features Marr along with Kim Harrison, Jeaniene Frost, Vicki Pettersson, and Jocelynn Drake, is currently the #1 title on the Kindle Store’s fantasy anthology list.

Today, as readers await the release of Radiant Shadows, the fourth book in her Wicked Lovely series, the series debut novel Wicked Lovely has been set up as a free pre-order “with free bonus material” in the Kindle Store, *although as I type these words the release date is set for April 6 and the Kindle price has yet to be reduced from 99 cents to free:

 (Or type “wicked lovely free” in your Kindle’s Kindle Store search field)

With publishers spending way too much time trying to figure out how to raise ebook prices and/or suppress Kindle sales in order to keep hardcovers on life support, it’s nice to see Marr’s HarperCollins marketing staff figuring out and doing what it takes to make her next novel a lucrative bestseller.

Radiant Shadows (Wicked Lovely) is set for hardcover release between April 20 and May 1 depending on your source, and the discounted hardcover pre-order price is $11.46. No pre-order page for the Kindle edition yet, and consequently no indication of how it will be priced.

*(Ordinarily in such cases Amazon will lower the pre-order price to zero and honor the zero-price for all pre-orders in accordance with the pre-order price guarantee in spite of the fact that there is no reference to a pre-order price guarantee on the Kindlepage, but if you don’t want to risk the 99 cents, you should find the pre-order page price adjusted down to zero soon.)

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Saturday March 20, 2010: Dozens of Free Promotional Titles, and a "Free Book Collections" Gateway to Over 2 Million Other Free Books!

“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
Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 23, 2010.

Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 23, 2010.

Stopping Time, Part 2 by Melissa Marr
Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 23, 2010.



A Passion Most Pure (Daughters of Boston, Book 1) by Julie Lessman



A Rush of Wings (A Rush of Wings Series #1) by Kristen Heitzmann

and …

“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 are the rest of the freebies in the Kindle Store:

Product Details
from Touchstone Pictures (Kindle Edition – Mar. 15, 2010)Kindle Book

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 2010

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Friday, March 19, 2010: 3 Pre-Orders, and Millions More!

“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
Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 23, 2010.

Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 23, 2010.

Stopping Time, Part 2 by Melissa Marr
Available for Pre-order. This item will be released on Mar. 23, 2010.



A Passion Most Pure (Daughters of Boston, Book 1) by Julie Lessman



A Rush of Wings (A Rush of Wings Series #1) by Kristen Heitzmann

and …

“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 are the rest of the freebies in the Kindle Store:

Product Details
from Touchstone Pictures (Kindle Edition – Mar. 15, 2010)Kindle Book

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 2010

Free Book Alert: How to Access Millions of Free Books in Seconds from Anywhere in the World with Kindle for Mac or PC App

By Stephen Windwalker
Originally posted at Kindle Nation Daily 3.18.2010


Click here to download the Kindle for Mac app

Related posts:

The new Kindle for Mac App, like its predecessor Kindle App for the PC, provides a seamless, elegant way to download Kindle content legally from a variety of free internet services and websites.

You can then read the material directly on your computer with the Kindle for Mac or PC app, which is a great option especially for material that is beyond the graphic-rendering pay grade of a 6″ Kindle display. The Kindle for Mac or PC App also provides a terrific gateway to your Kindle, with the help of your Kindle’s USB connection to your computer. Here are the basic steps, to be followed with a list of free content sites and services:

  • First, of course, you will need to make sure that you have downloaded the Kindle for Mac app here and registered it to your Amazon account.
  • Next, go to any of the free sites and services listed below, such as the Internet Archive page for a graphic-intensive title from 1941 called The Art of Caricaturing.(Note: some sites may include files that may require conversion through Amazon.)
  • Click on the appropriate link to download a Kindle, .AZW, or .MOBI file to your computer. In this screenshot, you would click on the “Kindle (beta)” link in the lower left corner.
  • When you see a download dialogue box like that shown below, choose “Kindle for Mac” as the application with which you wish to open the downloaded book, and check the box at the bottom so that your Mac will automatically open such files with the Kindle for Mac app in the future.
  • The newly downloaded book should appear in your Kindle for Mac display, and be represented on your Kindle for Mac Home screen, within seconds. 
  • You will then be able to move any downloaded book of your choosing seamlessly to your Kindle simply by connecting your Mac (or PC) to your Kindle via USB cable and transferring the downloaded book to your Kindle’s “documents” folder either by dragging and dropping it with your mouse or copying and pasting it with the usual Mac or PC commands.
  • For some of the services listed below such as the Project Gutenberg Magic Catalog and Feedbooks, you can make the process even more seamless by downloading and opening the service, just like you would open any Kindle book, from within your Kindle for Mac or Kindle for PC app and clicking on a selected title to begin an immediate download to your computer.

Here’s a listing of free content sites and services that should be compatible with your Kindle for Mac or Kindle for PC.

What’s in Store for the Kindle in 2010 and Beyond?

In case you missed it, Apple is now taking pre-orders for the iPad for delivery on April 3 (or late April, if you want 3G with your iPad). I’ve decided at least, for now, to forego the early adopter tax and try to duck being called an idiot by PC World magazone, so I’m going to wait, at least for now, before buying an iPad. For now, anyway.

But it does seem like a good time to take stock of where we are and to review the forthcoming Kindle features that we are currently expecting — or in some cases hoping — to see sometime in 2010.

First, Dylan Tweney at Wired.com has a concise, helpful comparison of 10 ereaders here. Spoiler alert: Dylan rates the latest-generation Kindle #1 with 9 out of 10 stars, ahead of the iPhone and the Kindle DX in second and third place, respectively.

Meanwhile, here’s my quick checklist of Kindle features that I expect or hope to see in the near future:

New Features for All Kindle Owners

  • A content management system of folders or labels. (Promised for the first half of 2010, in this November 2009 announcement on Amazon’s official Amazon Kindle Facebook page:  “Kindle Customers, We have heard from many of you that you would like to have a better way to organize your growing Kindle libraries.  We are currently working on a solution that will allow you to organize your Kindle libraries.  We will be releasing this functionality as an over-the-air software update as soon as it is ready, in the first half of next year.”)
  • Improved accessibility features including audible menuing and a new super-sized font. (Promised for the first half of 2010 in a December 2009 news release entitled Blind and Vision-Impaired Readers to Benefit from New Kindle Features in 2010.)
  • A Kindle Apps store with a wide range of applications to make the Kindle more useful and user-friendly for reading and other purposes. (Promised for the first half of 2010 in a January 2010 news release entitled Amazon Announces Kindle Development Kit–Software Developers Can Now Build Active Content for Kindle.)
  • Steady dramatic increases in selection with little or no “windowing” and continued pressure from Amazon to keep the vast majority of ebooks at prices under $10.
  • Engagement with book-oriented cataloging and networking services such as Shelfari (which was acquired by Amazon in August 2008).
  • Front-door default support for email, Twitter, and mobile Facebook applications. 
  • Continued aggressive expansion of support for multiple ebook formats allowing Kindle to read a widening range of ebooks from sources other than Kindle Store including a growing list of free public domain books.

New Features for Global Kindle Owners

  • Access to Kindle blogs and periodicals beyond U.S. borders.
  • Extended and expanded wireless coverage with new carrier contracts to mitigate against per-document wireless fees beyond U.S. borders.
  • Possibility of  tiered pricing for unlimited international web access and data transmission.
  • Extensions of local country Kindle Store nexus (initially in Canada, U.K., and Australia?) that would allow Amazon to mitigate against value-added taxes and import duties. (Promised, for UK with no date specified, by UK Amazon manager).
  • Steady dramatic expansion of multilingual Kindle catalog and steady dramatic expansion of Kindle language and alphabet support.

New Features Driven by SuperKindle Hardware Enhancements

“No Kindle Required” – Kindle Apps and Widgets for Other Devices

As you know, you can already run the Kindle app that allows you to buy, download, and read Kindle books on the PC, the iPhone, the iPod Touch and the BlackBerry. I believe Amazon is investing major efforts in expanding this offering to include the following additional devices, most of them during 2010, and may also be developing Kindle Widgets for browsers such as Internet Explorer and Firefox:

  • Mac (Already promised; has been listed as coming soon on the Kindle site since October 2009).
  • iPad (Should be active at or near the iPad’s April 3 release date. At its January 27 iPad announcement event Apple said that the iPad would run all iPhone Apps, and Barnes & Noble recently announced that there will be a Nook App on the iPad. It remains to be seen whether the Kindle for iPad App will include enhancements not already available with the Kindle for iPhone/iPod Touch App).
  • Microsoft Phones and Tablets
  • Dell Streak/Mini 5 Android Phone
  • Droid, Nexus One, All Android Devices
  • Fisher-Price iXL
  • Palm Devices
  • Other dedicated ebook readers

E-Commerce Connect-the-Dots Possibilities

  • The Kindle has the potential to become the ultimate e-commerce Trojan horse for Amazon by taking the Kindle’s version of Amazon’s recently patented one-click purchasing facility and connecting it directly to every item in Amazon’s Store including streaming MP3 audio and Video on Demand content that could download directly and play on the SuperKindle.
  • Bundling Kindle and hardcopy editions or Kindle and Audible.com for a premium price that allows savings on each part of the transaction
  • Re-integration of Kindle content with Amazon Associates: Originally, beginning with the Kindle launch in November 2007, Amazon paid a 10 percent commission on links to all Kindle hardware, branded accessories, and content. This was much higher than the usual Amazon Associates commission of 4 to 8.5 percent, but early in 2009 Amazon zeroed out Kindle content commissions, presumably due to thin or negative Kindle book margins. Now, with intensifying competition with other ebook content providers and Kindle content margins rising to at least 30 per cent given changes in Amazon’s relationships with publishers, it would make good business sense for Amazon to re-establish Amazon Associates commissions for all content in the Kindle Store to drive more traffic there.

Wrap it up and tie it with a bow, Jeff, and deliver it to my house, and I’ll never buy that iPad.