Baen Free Library

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The Baen Free Library is a digital library of the science fiction and fantasy publishing house Baen Books where (as of February 2007) 94 full books are available for free download in a number of formats, without copy protection. It was founded in autumn 1999 by science fiction writer Eric Flint and publisher Jim Baen to determine whether the availability of books free of charge on the Internet encourages or discourages the sale of their paper books.

The Baen Free Library represents an interesting experiment in the field of intellectual property and copyright. It appears that sales of both the books made available free and other books by the same author, even from a different publisher, increase when the electronic version is made available free of charge. [1]

In 2002, Baen also started adding CD-ROMs into some hardcovers of newest titles in successful series. They contain the complete series of novels preceding the printed book (for those books that were the latest in a series), other works by the same author, some works by other authors, and multimedia bonuses. The CD-ROMs have a prominent permissive copyright license which expressly encourages free-of-charge copying and sharing, including over the Internet.

Baen also operates Webscriptions, a subscription-based e-book program.

[edit] Current titles

Current as of 2007-02-27.

  1. 1632 by Eric Flint
  2. 1633 by Eric Flint
  3. 1812: The Rivers of War by Eric Flint
  4. Agent of Vega by James H. Schmitz
  5. Anti-Grav Unlimited by Duncan Long
  6. The Apocalypse Troll by David Weber
  7. Bedlam Boyz by Ellen Guon
  8. Berserker Throne by Fred Saberhagen
  9. Beyond World's End by Rosemary Edghill
  10. Black on Black by K. D. Wentworth
  11. Born to Run by Mercedes Lackey
  12. Changer of Worlds by David Weber
  13. The Course of Empire by Eric Flint and K. D. Wentworth
  14. Crawling Between Heaven and Earth by Sarah Hoyt
  15. The Creatures of Man by Howard L. Myers
  16. Cross the Stars by David Drake
  17. Crusade by David Weber
  18. Demon Blade by Mark A. Garland and Charles G. McGraw
  19. Destiny's Shield by Eric Flint and David Drake
  20. Diamonds Are Forever by Ryk Spoor and Eric Flint
  21. Digital Knight by Ryk Spoor
  22. Doc Sidhe by Aaron Allston
  23. The Excalibur Alternative by David Weber
  24. Fallen Angels by Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, and Michael Flynn
  25. Far Edge of Darkness by Linda Evans
  26. Fiddler Fair by Mercedes Lackey
  27. Fire In the Mist by Holly Lisle
  28. The Forlorn by Dave Freer
  29. Fortune's Stroke by Eric Flint and David Drake
  30. Forward the Mage by Eric Flint and Richard Roach
  31. Freehold by Michael Z. Williamson
  32. Genie Out of the Bottle by Eric Flint
  33. The Grantville Gazette, Vol. 1, edited by Eric Flint
  34. Great Kings' War by Roland Green and John F. Carr
  35. Gust Front by John Ringo
  36. A Hymn Before Battle by John Ringo
  37. The Honor of the Queen by David Weber
  38. The Hub: Dangerous Territory by James H. Schmitz
  39. In the Heart of Darkness by David Drake & Eric Flint
  40. Inherit the Stars by James P. Hogan
  41. Interstellar Patrol by Christopher Anvil
  42. The Lark and the Wren by Mercedes Lackey
  43. The Lighter Side by Keith Laumer (edited and compiled by Eric Flint)
  44. The Lion of Farside by John Dalmas
  45. Lt. Leary Commanding by David Drake
  46. A Logic Named Joe by Murray Leinster (edited and compiled by Eric Flint)
  47. March to the Sea by David Weber and John Ringo
  48. March Upcountry by David Weber and John Ringo
  49. Med Ship by Murray Leinster
  50. Mother of Demons by Eric Flint
  51. The Mountains of Mourning by Lois McMaster Bujold
  52. The Multiplex Man by James P. Hogan
  53. Mutineers' Moon by David Weber
  54. Northworld by David Drake
  55. Oath of Swords by David Weber
  56. An Oblique Approach by David Drake & Eric Flint
  57. Odyssey by Keith Laumer
  58. Old Nathan by David Drake
  59. On Basilisk Station by David Weber
  60. Original versions of edited Godwin Stories by Tom Godwin
  61. Original versions of edited Schmitz Stories by James H. Schmitz
  62. Pandora's Legions by Christopher Anvil
  63. Paying the Piper by David Drake
  64. The Philosophical Strangler by Eric Flint
  65. Planets of Adventure by Murray Leinster
  66. A Plague of Demons by Keith Laumer (edited by Eric Flint)
  67. Pyramid Scheme by Dave Freer and Eric Flint
  68. Rats, Bats and Vats by Dave Freer and Eric Flint
  69. Redliners by David Drake
  70. Retief! by Keith Laumer
  71. The Sea Hag by David Drake
  72. Seas of Venus by David Drake
  73. Sentry Peak by Harry Turtledove
  74. The Shadow of the Lion by Mercedes Lackey
  75. Sheepfarmer's Daughter by Elizabeth Moon
  76. Sisters of Glass by D. W. St. John
  77. Slayer by Karen Koehler
  78. Sleipnir by Linda Evans
  79. Star Soldiers by Andre Norton
  80. Stars Over Stars by K. D. Wentworth
  81. Sunrise Alley by Catherine Asaro
  82. Sympathy for the Devil by Holly Lisle
  83. The Tank Lords by David Drake
  84. Telzey Amberdon by James H. Schmitz
  85. Time Traders by Andre Norton
  86. The Two Faces of Tomorrow by James P. Hogan
  87. The Tyrant by David Drake
  88. There Will Be Dragons by John Ringo
  89. This Scepter'd Isle by Mercedes Lackey and Roberta Gellis
  90. TNT-Telzey & Trigger by James H. Schmitz
  91. The War God's Own by David Weber
  92. The Warslayer by Rosemary Edghill
  93. Werehunter by Mercedes Lackey
  94. Windows of the Soul by Paul Chafe
  95. With the Lightnings by David Drake
  96. Wizard's Bane by Rick Cook
  97. Wizardry Compiled by Rick Cook
  98. Wolf Time by Lars Walker

[edit] Letters to and from Baen's First Librarian

This section lists letters from readers to Baen's "First Librarian", Eric Flint, and responses he made in return about the Free Library and its offerings, but more importantly these discuss the experiences of Baen with offering free titles and further discuss issues in ePublishing in general. Of particular note, are the grateful letters from blind and handicapped individuals, and the wide geographic demographic of the Baen experiment. However, most of the material is historically interesting 'snapshots' of the arguments over intellectual property rights in the early days of the Free Library and development of the Baen Books publishing style of offering titles both by download and in print.

Link and Title of Page Description in Brief
*Introducing the Baen Free Library Eight pages on how the library came to be and the software piracy and publisher issue in general.
*Letters to the Librarian December 20th, 2000 A selection of 123 letters about the free library as seen by the readers; of particular note: Messages from a blind reader and a handicapped reader.
*Letters to the Librarian January 16th, 2001 Special Report on 200 plus Letters received in 24 hours when the Free Library made internet news.
Letters to the Librarian February 04th, 2001 Special Report on self-publishing on the internet with commentary by First Librarian Eric Flint.
M.P. Macaulay on copyright law 1841 issues Two speeches on copyright law to the British House of Commons during 1841, characterized by historian Flint as brilliant, as they cover the issues still problematic in copyright law.
Letters to the Librarian, Eric Flint September 1, 2001 This matter deals with intellectual property rights and piracy of intellectual materials
Letters to the Librarian, Eric Flint April 15, 2002 One and a half years into the Library, Flint provides hard numbers on how sales and works listed on the Baen Free Library are related.
Letters to the Librarian, Eric Flint April 26, 2002 More numbers on how hypothetical thefts can't be harming publishing industry to any significant extent. Discusses as well Book Vs eBook preferences, and need for authors to achieve exposure and the role of the Free Library in providing such.
Letters to the Librarian, Eric Flint April 26, 2002 Discusses prominent writers opposed to eBooks for free, and cites how such might help their sales.
Letters to the Librarian#1, Eric Flint May 12, 2002 Stance on helping blind and handicapped persons and others of limited means including kids obtain free materials with an argument of how that eventually helps an authors sales.
Letters to the Librarian#2, Eric Flint May 12, 2002 Discusses paper versus screen reading; studies showing much better retention from paper learning, and includes a long letter relating experiences on sales by an educational publisher once they offered free works like Baen Free Library.
Reprint by singer and song writer Janis Ian September 16, 2002 Three-time Grammy award winner Janis Ian in an article reprint excoriating the music publishing industry and praising Baen and a few others. Flint makes one comment— a minor correction which supports Ms. Ian's point. (This is the last of the Letters to the Librarian)

[edit] External links

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