Northwest Missouri State University B.D. Owens Library



Electronic Texts


TIP: Press Ctrl/f and enter a root word, word, or phrase in the Find what: box and click on Find Next to search for a topic on this page. For example, type non-fiction to search for non-fiction. Other categories listed are poetry, plays, fiction, letters, literary criticism, fables, myths, and short stories.

Aesop's Fables
This "online collection of Aesop's Fables includes a total of 655+ Fables, indexed in table format, with morals listed. There are many more on the way. Most were translated into English by Rev. George Fyler Townsend (1814-1900) and Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914) the rest are from Jean De La Fontaine in French and translated to English by several good internet souls."

Alex Catalogue of Electronic Books (includes poetry, plays, fiction, and non-fiction)
This well-chosen collection has three parts: American Literature, English Literature, and Western Philosophy. All the works available here, as in most public collections of electronic books, are within the public domain. No materials published after the early 20th century are present. One note of caution for beginning philosophy students: Leibnitz’ “Monadology” does not date from the 19th century as indicated here. Only the translation is from 1898. The original was published in 1714.

American Verse Project (poetry)
"The American Verse Project is a collaborative project between the University of Michigan Humanities Text Initiative (HTI) and the University of Michigan Press. The project is assembling an electronic archive of volumes of American poetry prior to 1920. The full text of each volume of poetry is being converted into digital form and coded in Standard Generalized Mark-up Language (SGML) using the TEI Guidelines, with various forms of access provided through the WWW."

Anne Frank: The Writer
This Holocaust Exhibit includes the full text of Anne Frank's original diaries and more.

Bartleby.com (reference books, poetry, fiction, nonfiction, fables, myths, literary criticism)
Bartleby’s free electronic offerings feature reference books, verse, fiction, and non-fiction. Unlike most electronic book sites that offer “plain text,” the full text of Bartleby’s electronic offerings can be searched by keyword. Many up-to-date reference books are offered including dictionaries, the Columbia Encyclopedia (a large single volume work), the Columbia Gazetteer, quotations books, and thesauri, etc. The non-fiction section features the Harvard Classics, American historical documents, essays, and early 20th century scientific papers. The ads on this site can be a bit irritating.

Bibliomania (fiction, non-fiction, poetry, articles, short stories, plays, literary criticism)
"Bibliomania has thousands of e-books, poems, articles, short stories and plays all of which are absolutely free. You can read the world's greatest fiction by authors such as Dickens and Joyce, Sherlock Holmes mysteries, all Shakespeare's plays, or just dip into some short stories by writers such as Mark Twain, Anton Chekov and Edgar Allan Poe."

Christian Classics Ethereal Library (reference, non-fiction, fiction)
The “Classics” section of this site includes authors such as Boethius, Dante, Donne, Milton, and Pascal who are read as much for their contribution to literature or philosophy as for their religious views. The site includes the Bible in many languages and translations and important religious reference books. The full text of all materials on the site may be searched.

Collection of Electronic Texts
This site provides material compiled by Robert Bain, a professor at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. The page includes the digitized texts of numerous Southern writers as well as biographical information about the authors.

Cornell University Library Historical Monographs
"The Cornell University Library Historical Monographs is a collection of selected monographs with expired copyrights chosen from a variety of disciplines. These were monographs that were brittle and decaying and in need of rescue."

Digital Book Index (reference, fiction, non-fiction, poetry, plays, myths, folklore)
"Digital Book Index provides access to more than 80,000 titles records from more than 1800 commercial and non-commercial publishers, universities, and various private sites. About 48,000 of these books, texts, and documents are available free, while many others are available at very modest cost." Registration (at no cost) is required.

Electronic Text Center (reference, fiction, non-fiction, poetry, newspapers, drama)
The site contains transcribed books and manuscripts in the humanities in English and fifteen other languages. Many of the materials listed as “publicly available” seem not to be, but many older texts do display properly on the screen.

Emory Women Writers Resource Project (non-fiction)
"The Emory Women Writers Resource Project is a collection of edited and unedited texts by women writing in English from the seventeenth century through the nineteenth century."

The English Server Fiction Collection (fiction, short stories, fables, criticism)
"This site offers works of and about fiction collected from our members, contributing authors worldwide, and texts in the public domain."

eScholarship Editions: University of California Press (non-fiction, fiction, poetry, criticism)
"More than 400 . . . titles are available to the general public" at this site.

The EServer Drama Collection (plays, criticisms)
"This site contains a collection of original plays and screenplays, criticism and links to other sites concerned with theatre. It publishes both classic and contemporary works."

E-Server.org (fiction, non-fiction, plays, poetry)
"The EServer is a unique website where 281 writers, artists, editors and scholars gather to publish and discuss their works (currently 31849 of them in all). . . . The EServer (founded in 1990 as the English Server) attempts to provide an alternative niche for quality work. . . . [They] offer 44 collections on such diverse topics as contemporary art, race, Internet studies, sexuality, drama, design, multimedia, accessible publishing and current political and social issues."

Folklore and Mythology Electronic Texts
Professor D. L. Ashliman, University of Pittsburgh, has created a lengthly list of links to Web sites that include folklore and mythology in full text.

Humanities Text Initiative (reference, non-fiction, literary criticism, fables)
"The HTI collaborates with the other units of the University of Michigan library to select texts for conversion, create metadata to describe the electronic text and the source document, and deliver the material via the World Wide Web. The HTI also has partnered with a number of other groups and institutions to create and deliver electronic resources including an online journal of book reviews, a catalog of electronic texts available via the Internet, and a linguistics database, as well as the more familiar collections of poetry and prose. "

The Internet Public Library (fiction, non-fiction, plays, fables, reference, articles, newspapers)
"The IPL Books Collection (formerly known as Online Texts) contains over 20,000 titles that can be browsed by author, by title, or by Dewey Decimal Classification. They can also be searched."

Making of America (non-fiction, articles)
"Making of America (MoA) is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. The collection is particularly strong in the subject areas of education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology. The collection currently contains approximately 8,500 books and 50,000 journal articles with 19th century imprints."

The National Academies Press
Look for full text online books at the site under "Special Collections."

The Norton Anthology of English Literature (fiction, non-fiction, criticism, poetry, plays, lyrics)
"The Norton Online Archive is an ongoing project that at present includes more than 150 fully edited texts, ranging from the Middle Ages through the Victorian Period."

The Oxford Text Archives (fiction, non-fiction, plays, fables, poetry)
"The Oxford Text Archive hosts AHDS Literature, Languages and Linguistics. The OTA works closely with members of the Arts and Humanities academic community to collect, catalogue, and preserve high-quality electronic texts for research and teaching. The OTA currently distributes more than 2000 resources in over 20 different languages, and is actively working to extend its catalogue of holdings."

Page by Page Books (fiction, short stories, speeches, fables)
This site includes "hundreds of classic books" that can be read page by page.

Project Gutenberg (fiction, non-fiction, plays, poetry, short stories, criticism)
As the web site itself indicates, “Project Gutenberg is the Internet's oldest producer of free electronic books (eBooks or etexts).” More than 10,000 titles are available, both fiction and non-fiction. Most are in English or translated into English, but many are also available in French, German, and other languages. The selection can be somewhat random. For the ancient Greek philosopher Plato, for example, most of the dialogues, including “The Republic” are here, but not “The Laws”. However, along with the dialogues is a book about Plato by the nineteenth century critic, Walter Pater. Minority authors are relatively few, but those who published books long ago, including Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. Du Bois, and Phillis Wheatley are in the collection. In all, Project Gutenberg makes available much of the best of the European and American cultural tradition that is in the public domain according to American copyright law.

Schoenberg Center for Electronic Text & Image (non-fiction, fiction, criticism)
"SCETI, a fully integrated digital library, was created in 1996 to publish virtual facsimiles of rare books and manuscripts in the Penn Library's collections. Its ongoing mission is to make accessible to the global community of scholars and researchers primary source materials that would otherwise be difficult to access. the site is free and open to all in the interests of knowledge and learning."

SearcheBooks.com (criticism, poetry, plays, fiction, non-fiction)
This search tool allows users to search electronic books by author, title, or subject.

UCIAS Digital Volumes (non-fiction)
"UCIAS publishes peer-reviewed articles, monographs and edited volumes drawn from research projects, workshops, seminars, conferences, and related efforts of internationally oriented institutes, centers, and programs involving University of California and UC-affiliated scholars."

Universal Library (fiction, non-fiction, plays, poetry, fables)
The project is hosted by Carnegie Mellon University. They hope to create "a free-to-read, searchable collection of one million books, primarily in the English language, available to everyone over the Internet. Within 10 years, it is . . . [expected] that the collection will grow to 10 million books."

Victorian Women Writers Project (fiction, non-fiction, poetry, letters, short stories)
"The goal of the Victorian Women Writers Project is to produce highly accurate transcriptions of works by British women writers of the 19th century."

Wright American Fiction (fiction, short stories)
"The Wright American Fiction online collection attempts to include every novel published in the United States from 1851 to 1875. It includes works by well known writers such as Louisa May Alcott, Mark Twain, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, and Harriet Beecher Stowe, along with a great many forgotten authors, whose works may have been very popular in their own time."

 

All quoted material is from the respective source.

Return to Course/Subject Resources

Revised (April 6, 2009)
Created (November 2003)
Links Verified (October 2008)