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The top book overall, according to Amazon editors, is Tara Westover’s memoir Educated. The list includes picks for print, Kindle, and Audible editions.
In June, book lovers are looking for new books they could add to
their summer reading lists, and welcome with appreciation a mid-year
list of The Best Books of the Year So Far.
Revealed in mid-June, the ranking is curated by Amazon editors and
includes titles featured as the Best Books of the Month between January
and June, as well as worthwhile new titles released in the recent weeks.
Amazon editors have picked Educated
by Tara Westover as the top pick of 2018 so far. This stirring memoir
chronicles how she survived her survivalist upbringing, eventually
earning a Ph.D. from Cambridge University.
Sarah Harrison Smith, editorial director of Amazon Books and Kindle, said about the winning book:
It was Educated, Tara Westover’s utterly remarkable memoir,
that was our hands-down favorite. By sheer force of will, she emerged
from a rough, unschooled childhood among Idaho survivalists to earn a
doctorate in history at Cambridge University. We were awed by her
journey.
The #1 book in Literature & Fiction (and #2 overall) is The Great Alone, an instant New York Times bestseller by Kristin Hannah, the author of The Nightingale.
This page-turner follows a damaged Vietnam vet who moves his family
to the wilds of Alaska. As winter approaches and his mental state
deteriorates, his wife and daughter find themselves in an increasingly
precarious position. The Woman in the Window
by A.J. Finn was picked as the best book in Mystery, Thriller &
Suspense category. It’s a seductive and unpredictable novel about an
agoraphobic woman with a tricky past who witnesses a murder.
What are other books released in the first half of 2018 and adored by Amazon editors? Let’s take a look.
To read ebooks, you don’t need a tablet or
e-reader. You can read books online, in your internet browser. Most
popular sites are listed below.
Nowadays, the internet is a major tool to find products we need. With
more and more content going digital, you don’t have to go to a
bookstore to preview the book before buying it.
But what “read books online” means exactly? It means you won’t need any of these:
a special device, like an Kindle e-reader or Samsung tablet,
a special application or browser extension.
All you need is a computer connected to the internet, and the
application you use most: the internet browser like Chrome, Safari,
Firefox or Internet Explorer.
You can also read the books entirely if their digital versions is available online for free. This happens to most public domain books. They are free because their intellectual property rights have expired.
Institutions like Project Gutenberg or Internet Archive digitize
public domain books and make them available for free through their
online catalogs.
When it comes to paid books, and it doesn’t matter whether you want to buy a print or ebook version, free book previews are a standard feature offered by many online bookstores.
You can read approximately 10% of the paid book – long enough to make a decision whether to order a book or not.
If you are an ebook newbie, the three largest online stores offering ebooks are:
The sites listed below are the ones where you can read books online
from the first to the last page. The detailed description includes a
choice of titles and some tips on how to improve the reading experience
when reading a book in your internet browser.
Descriptions include also screenshots of the reading interface so that you can quickly compare the services.
If you’d like to add any site to the list, please leave your
suggestion in the comments below. Thank you for dropping by. You’re
awesome as always!
An
updated list of sites that offer free public domain books (ebooks and
audiobooks) that you can download and use legally. Project Gutenberg,
Europeana, DPLA, Internet Archive, Feedbooks, Open Library, and more.
10 sites where you can read books online
1. Project Gutenberg
Project Gutenberg is a mother of all ebook sites. It started in 1971,
when a first ebook ever was created, “Declaration of Independence of
the United States of America”.
Many sites that offer free ebooks from public domain use the titles originally uploaded to Project Gutenberg.
Currently, there are about 45,000 public domain books in the catalog.
If you’re looking for great classic books, Project Gutenberg is the
right destination to go.
You can read the book online in two ways. 1. Go to page with book details and click on Read this ebook online link. 2. Open html file.
The Read online default option displays only the unformatted text of the book. Plus there is a left sidebar visible all the time.
That’s why I found reading an html file much nicer. It displays all
elements and all formatting, so you will be able to see the original
cover of the book, as well as illustrations inside. You will also be
able to navigate using the table of content or click on hyperlinks
inside the file.
Ebooks from Project Gutenberg are extremely well prepared. Using an
html format to read them online is a very good idea. Once you open the
file, you have the simple full-screen view that you can scroll through.
The is one more benefit. The file is searchable. You can use your browser’s find tool to search for words inside the book.
Below there are screenshots of two reading options from Project Gutenberg. ⇢ Project Gutenberg
2. Internet Archive
Internet Archive, founded in 1996, is a non-profit organization
offering free access to digital or digitized content: books, images,
videos, or audio files.
The catalog includes well over 6,000,000 fully accessible public
domain ebooks and other text files. The section can be reached at this
link: archive.org/details/texts.
Use the search box in the top left corner to find the book. By
default, the list of results will be limited only to texts. You can sort
the results by relevance, rating, download count, and the date of
adding the item to the catalog.
To read the book, just click on the arrows in the bottom bar of the
image of the opened book. You can enter full screen by clicking on the fullscreen link underneath.
The online viewer presents the scanned pages of the book, what brings an extra flavor to reading.
There are many ways to go through the content of the book, including one-page view, and zooming.
One thing to keep in mind is that the content of the book is fully
searchable, let not the scan mislead you. Use the search bar in the top
right corner to find a word. All found instances will be marked in the
progress bar at the bottom.
One of the most amazing things on Internet Archive is the
text-to-speech function. You can turn it on by clicking on the speaker
icon in the top right corner of the book viewer. ⇢ Internet Archive
3. Open Library
You can find exactly the same online book reader tool on another
site: Open Library. The site is actually Internet Archive’s separate
project, more focused on collecting library records.
Its goal is to create one web page for every book ever published. On a
page of a single book, you’ll find all its documented editions.
The site claims to have 6 million authors and 20 million books. You can search inside 2 million titles.
Once you find the book, you’ll immediately know whether you can read it online. A Read icon is shown next to the title.
Click on the Read icon and you’ll land in the full-screen online reader, similar to Internet Archive.
When you click on the info icon, marked with “i” letter (right side
of the top bar), you’ll be presented with options to download the book.
Clicking on mobi or pdf link will immediately download the book to your computer. ⇢ Open Library
4. Google Books
A huge collection of books that Google scanned and turned into viewable files is now available on Google.
The homepage of Google Books is actually a search box. More
importantly, Google will prompt you to check out Google Play – their
online ebookstore.
To stay in the Google Books project, use the search box on the left side, as shown in the screenshot below.
You can type in an author or a book’s title. Not all books can be
fully previewed, but you can narrow search results to those that are.
To do that, in the upper bar click on Search tools, and then Any view. Select Full view to see only the books that can be read online from the beginning to the end. Select Preview and full view to have the list of books that give an option to:
read a free sample,
read a full content.
The free preview in Google Books doesn’t have to be a first part of the book.
Let’s say a publisher sets a free preview to be 20% of a book. You
can select a chapter in the middle and read 20% from now on. Or jump
from page to page, if you want.
You’ll be able to preview the book until you reach the limit of free pages set by a publisher.
In case of contemporary books, the preview pages are scans, and they
are displayed with a permission of the publisher (see screenshot above). ⇢ Google Books
5. Smashwords
I’m a big fan of Smashwords. It’s the biggest and most advanced site
with ebooks from independent authors and publishers. There are currently
around 300,000 from over 100,000 authors.
Many Smashwords books are being sold in big ebookstores, including Barnes & Noble, or Kobo.
All these bookstores offer an option to send a sample file to a
connected device or application, but options to read books online are
limited to selected titles or/and short excerpts.
If you find out that a publisher of the book is Smashwords, you can
be sure that in the original site you can read a free sample in your
browser.
What’s more, Smashwords authors have an option to set up the length
of a free preview. Some writers choose to let readers preview the
entire book.
On a page with book details, scroll down to see a table with available ebook reading formats. Click on Online Reading to start reading.
There are several customization options to choose from. You can
select a size (4 levels to choose from), and font face (Arial, Courier,
Times, Verdana, Georgia). You can also personalize colors by setting up
your own font and background.
Quite frankly, reading interface offered by Smashwords is not the strongest part of this great site.
There is no full-screen view, for example. It would help a lot, as the book content window is very narrow.
The screenshot above shows options I found most suitable for reading
on the computer screen (font-to-background contrast not too big, font
size large enough):
Blurb is one of the most important self-publishing sites, where you
can find a lot of quality, very well designed ebooks. To discover new
books to read, you can go directly to Blurb bookstore.
Very often, online book previews on Blurb show the entire content, as authors earn money on selling print versions.
As the site is focused on showcasing beautifully designed books, the reading interface was developed with that purpose in mind.
After you find the book, click on its cover if you see Preview Book!
ribbon. It takes some time for the book to load, but it’s worth waiting
if you’re looking for books that could give you a visual inspiration.
I recommend switching to full-screen mode right away. You can browse
through the book page by page, or quickly jump to interesting section
using thumbnail preview. ⇢ Blurb
7. Scribd
The service is often described as YouTube for documents. There are
millions of docs available here: comics, presentations, brochures – and
obviously books.
There is one thing you have to keep in mind, as you may get lost when
entering the site. Scribd offers its visitors two kinds of books:
the ones available through a monthly subscription,
the free ones.
Scribd is reading on steroids. You’ve got several ways to share what
you read. There is an option to embed a book on blog or website.
Some time ago the site was packed with Google ads. It made it almost
impossible to focus on reading. Now the interface is much smoother and
the reading experience is way better than before.
The content of a book is displayed immediately when you open the
book’s page. Once you scroll down, all distracting elements are gone,
leaving only a top toolbar and download widget. ⇢ Scribd
8. Wattpad
Canada-based Wattpad is one of the most popular e-reading communities
in the world. According to official information, Wattpad readers spend
over 2 billion minutes on the site every month.
Every minute, more than 10,000 readers are connected with a new story.
The site supports over 20 languages. When you select your mother
tongue, you’ll see books in your language and book recommendations from
users who selected the same language.
To find new stories, click on Discover in a navigation bar,
and you’ll see a handy panel where you can browse by category, type a
keyword or find what other users are reading. ⇢ Wattpad
9. Bookish
If you care about the user interface and a pleasure of reading, you
should definitely try Bookish. The service has the most beautiful book
reading interface I’ve ever seen.
You have to sign in, but the process takes only a moment.
Service is designed to be a user’s cloud bookshelf. There are not
many books available for immediate reading. Public domain titles can be
browsed from a dashboard. You can also add your own DRM-free ePub files. ⇢ Bookish
10. 24Symbols
Another interesting book startup to watch. You can connect with your
Facebook account. A dashboard is very well-organized. You can browse
catalog alphabetically, by author or category, and by, yes – language.
The right panel shows details of a book. You can start reading by either clicking on a red-colored Read button or selecting one of the chapters from a table of content. ⇢ 24Symbols
These stories are by contemporary authors.If you’ve never read these
authors before, their free short stories will give you a taste of their
style before you commit to one of their longer works. There’s something
for everyone, with stories in genres ranging from sci-fi to historical
fiction to horror.