
You don’t have to own a Kindle in order to read free (or purchased) books in that format. Amazon offers free readers that work on PC, Mac, Blackberry, iPad, and iPhone (no Linux yet). Just go to the Free Reading Apps page or, if that link is broken, go to Amazon, click on Kindle and then on Kindle Store, and you should see the links in the menu to the reader apps.
There are many ways to find free books for the Kindle. For one thing, it can read books in the unprotected Mobibooks format (mobi or prc file extensions) which you can find easily online (just search for “free ebooks”). The quality of these varies, of course.
Amazon also “sells” many Kindle books free (cost = $0.00) or nearly free (cost = $0.01 to $0.99). Many of these are public domain titles that you can get free elsewhere anyway, but sometimes even those are better-formatted in the Amazon store than elsewhere. A quick way to find some of these, anyway, is the link to Free Book Collections on the main page of the Kindle Store – Books page. Examples include works by G. K. Chesterton, Jane Austen, Leo Tolstoy, Willa Cather, and so on. Just reading these could keep you going the rest of your life.
Amazon also offers some current books free in the Kindle version for short periods. The book on pregnancy is an example. One way to find them is to go to the Kindle store, do a search (publisher, title, author, subject, or whatever), then sort the results by price. See blog post “How to Find Free Christian Kindle eBooks” by Jeff Brewer.


Another method for finding bargain Kindle books is to check the hourly-updated Bestsellers list, also on the main page of the Kindle Store. Since lots of people are interested in getting free books, those titles tend to end up on the bestsellers list for a time. Going even further, you can get news feeds for the Bestsellers and use your news reader (I like Google Reader) to show you the latest titles in a brief list format that contains the title and price.
A final warning, though. Someone recently pointed out to me that the real price of a book is generally the time you spend reading it. It’s tempting for us bargain hunters to collect free books, but it’s not a real bargain to spend several days of free time or study time reading a book just because it is free! Still, there are so many classics available free that perhaps a side effect of the ebook trend will be that we begin reading and valuing those more highly instead of only looking for the latest titles.
Thanks for this, Mike. You got me all excited to read some free books...and then I went to download the Kindle for PC app and got the dreaded message: "We're sorry. Kindle for PC is not currently available in Nigeria." Oh well...enjoy it while you can!
ReplyDeleteOK, that answers one question. Someone had heard that it was possible to download them in Nigeria. Well, another possibility is to get someone in the US to install the Kindle PC, then download the books, and simply email you the book file. Your Kindle PC should then read the book.
ReplyDeleteHi Mike.
ReplyDeleteSo glad that you posted the fraud alert on your blog...I was exchanging e-mails with someone who claimed to be you about an apartment and when I figured it was too good to be true, I did my research and found the blog. Thanks!!
Amazon has blown open the digital book world by introducing their Kindle book lending program. If you were looking for a way to reduce your reading budget you just may have found it.
ReplyDeleteI am poking here and there for helpful tips. Great post you have here. Thanks for sharing.
I am looking forward for your future blogs!