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Post by barnyjuno on Dec 21, 2004 11:56:20 GMT
www.gutenberg.orgI assume that some of you must have heard of project gutenburg, if not they're well worth a visit. Project Gutenberg aims to make freely available electronic copies of books that has gone out of copyright. If nothing else, it's a good place to start reading those books that you're *supposed* to have read but never quite got around to it. I'm currently reading M R James' "Ghost Stories of an Antiquary", partly becuase it's Christmas, and partly because it's more fun that writing a test specification. www.gutenberg.org/etext/8486
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Post by dk223 on Dec 21, 2004 19:47:42 GMT
speaking of online books, anyone know of a site that has a copy of a clockwork orange on it? ive lost my copy and am poor till xmas eve
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Post by barnyjuno on Dec 22, 2004 10:16:52 GMT
speaking of online books, anyone know of a site that has a copy of a clockwork orange on it? ive lost my copy and am poor till xmas eve Not in English, no.
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Post by shinigami on Dec 23, 2004 2:30:58 GMT
rob ill try get the audiobook version with my free subscription. No promises tho. My mp3 player rocks.
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Post by Hobgobearhugger on May 11, 2005 19:27:12 GMT
GK tell Hob-Gob to carry thread back to top. He apologise - 30s writing-thinking men was thread in other forum. This thread not too heavy - but its useful he says.
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Post by Goblin King on Aug 12, 2006 16:19:59 GMT
For alex: you were asking about pirated books. Well these are some of the online texts I was talking about. Classics like Frankenstein and Dracula should be in the list.
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Post by dratsucalex on Aug 12, 2006 17:17:06 GMT
woo cheers will look
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