Free E-Books of Public Domain Works from Project Gutenberg
By Andrew Murphy, published Jan 02, 2008
Published Content: 303 Total Views: 88,706 Favorited By: 12 CPs
Project Gutenberg got its start in 1971 when founder Michael Hart, then a student at the University of Illinois, obtained access to a rare mainframe computer. Since that kind of access was valued at anywhere between $100,000 and $100,000,000 at the time, he thought he should do something worthwhile with it. Therefore, he began archiving great works of literature for the world to enjoy. Soon, the computer was connected to the earliest version of the internet. The number of titles have been increasing ever since. The advent of optical scanning greatly facilitated this process as did the invention of a new proofreading service. Today, Project Gutenberg has been adding an average of 50 titles per week.
The books contained in Project Gutenberg's collection of digitized are many titles from the Western literary tradition. Although there are a few works from elsewhere, most of the titles are part of that cannon of European and American authors that have been taught for so many years. The website does have a few titles in different languages and has regional sister-projects that concentrate on the literature of a particular group. The collection also contains some non-textual works like classical sheet music and audio files. Most of the titles, however, are text files in plaintext format.
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