Kindling

Jan. 24th, 2011 10:55 am
essentialsaltes: (Internet Disease)
[personal profile] essentialsaltes
So I bought myself a Kindle. I'm a little amazed/creeped out by Amazon's message that I can buy books for it, which will be delivered wirelessly to the dingus inside its box as it makes its way through the postal system.

Anyway, I ask the greater hive-mind, particularly those with Kindle experience... What free or near-free books should I pack onto it? I see there's plenty of nearly free Lovecraft. But I assume many of these texts are just ripped from dagonbytes.com complete with typos (rather than ripped from hplovecraft.com). Which of the many alternatives will cause me the least pain? There's lots of free or nearly so Poe, Dunsany, Machen, Wells, and just about anything Project Gutenberg or similar projects have touched. Any advice on how to tell a well-formatted version that plays nicely with Kindle from a badly formatted one?

Any other advice from the Kindle experts? I see that the greatest work of English literature is available, but reviews of the Kindle edition are excoriating. How can this crime against humanity be amended?

And it is also annoying that you can't(?) separate reviews of the Kindle edition from reviews of the physical book and the audio version that all seem to be mashed together.

How can you tell if the Kindle version will be well Kindle-ized?

Sing to me of the Kindle, O Internet, the dingus polytropos...

Feedbooks

Date: 2011-01-24 07:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] incarnate.livejournal.com
I'm not 100% certain it'll work with the Kindle, but I've been using Feedbooks on my phone and on my Sony Reader for almost a year now and it's great. Their public domain books are top quality, and their bookstore is great too:

http://www.feedbooks.com/

Re: Feedbooks

Date: 2011-01-24 08:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ian-tiberius.livejournal.com
I second the recommendation of Feedbooks; I've been using the free "Laputa" app on my phone, which is 1) an excellent reader and 2) interfaces directly with Feedbooks and Gutenberg and other sources, so there's no separate go-download-the-file jiggery-pokery necessary; it's all done within the app. So far my experience with Feedbooks is that their books are well-formatted and typo-free. (I've been reading the original "Conan" stories by Robert E. Howard, per instructions from you and [livejournal.com profile] richardabecker.)

Re: Feedbooks

Date: 2011-01-24 08:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] incarnate.livejournal.com
Just as a note, I thought it would be fun to try out the "Roberta Howard" gender-bent Conan stories on Feedbooks... Don't be tempted. It is a pretty poor search/replace job on the original Howard books, so you end up with awkward constructs like "The mother wept greviously over his son..."

Re: Feedbooks

Date: 2011-01-24 09:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] essentialsaltes.livejournal.com
Thanks for the tip. Looks like Feedbooks will play nice with the Kindle.

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