B U R E A U O F P U B L I C S E C R E T S |
Robert Teeters Great Books Lists
www.interleaves.org/~rteeter/greatbks.html
(Reproduces numerous lists, including those from Charles Van Dorens The Joy of Reading, Adler and Van Dorens How To Read a Book, Philip Wards A Lifetime’s Reading and Harold Blooms The Western Canon.)Reading Rats Recommended Reading
www.terrenceberres.com/read.html
(Combines the results from several different lists of great books into one huge annotated list, with links to reviews, reproductions and other resources.)
If you are fortunate enough to live in an area with good libraries and used book stores, use them. Theres nothing like browsing among lots of books for giving you a sense of whats available and what you might want to read. The workers are usually happy to help you find what youre looking for, and you often end up noticing something even more interesting on an adjoining shelf. Note also that if your library does not have what you are looking for, they may be able to get it for you through a free interlibrary loan” from another library in the region.
However, you are no longer limited to such local resources. Thousands of used bookstores around the world now list all or part of their inventory online. This gives you a much better chance of finding a particular book. You can then compare the different editions and prices and order the one you want with a few clicks of the mouse. The following are among the websites that offer this type of searching and ordering service:
www.abebooks.com
www.addall.com/used
www.alibris.com
www.biblio.com
www.bookase.com
www.bookfinder.com
www.fetchbook.info
www.isbn.nu
www.alapage.com (French)
www.chapitre.com (French)
New books sites such as Amazon.com are also sometimes useful for getting an idea of what is currently available by a particular author. Then you can hunt up a used copy or go to the library. (Unless you are really in a hurry, it is rarely necessary to buy new books. When you do, I recommend patronizing independent stores rather than chains.)
Many classic works are archived on the Web. This is not the most comfortable way to read a long work, but it may be handy for short works, or for browsing or researching (e.g. quickly finding the location and exact wording of a quotation). There are also numerous websites devoted to particular authors. These sometimes provide useful information, but it should go without saying that they are no substitute for reading the books.
The following webpage lists various volunteer groups that provide free books to prisoners: www.books2prisoners.org/links.htm. These groups deserve your support.
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