Persephone Books discussion
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Consequences
Fidelity
Flush
The Mystery of Mrs Blencarrow
No Surrender
Amours De Voyage
Reuben Sachs
Journal of Katherine Mansfield
I like to track down second hand Persephones at www.bookfinder.com , but www.abebooks.com usually ends up the cheapest. Occasionally, www.biblio.com will have something. I find that Alibris and Amazon marketplace tend to be higher than ABE, but every now and then a renegade book will pop up by a seller who doesn't realize what he's selling (create a Persephone wishlist and watch the used book prices fluctuate. Great fun for those with OCD, but one must be very patient). There's also a nice seller on Amazon called Beyond the Sea who sells new editions at fair(ish) prices and includes a matching BOOKMARK!!!! (Be still my heart!) I only mention this because I just received The Young Pretenders wrapped up in lovely blue tissue paper with a kind note attached. http://www.amazon.com/gp/aag/main?ie=...
I'll be interested to hear what other sources people have found. Wish I could just buy them all new from Persephone and be done with it, but the exchange rate chokes me before I can hit the purchase button.

Consequences
Fidelity
Flush
The Mystery of Mrs Blencarrow
No Surrend..."
I would love to be able to order directly but when you add the shipping to the US, whoa! I may have to bite the bullet for the ones I really want but haven't been able to find at all.



Oh, Mumzie, that is so kind of you but I would never ask you to do that. What a sweet thought.
Thanks everyone for all of the suggestions! That's the nice thing about reading older books...it can be easier to find them for free or inexpensively. :)


Diane wrote: "Cynthia, I love books and never thought I would like an e- reader as much as I do. I love the little grey persephones I have, but they're hard to find and so expensive when I order them from Engla..."
Dumb question, Diane, because I really don't know about these things. I don't even have a smartphone. So can I buy these inexpensive books and download them to a Kindle? I don't have to just buy from Amazon?
Hi Cynthia! Diane will probably have more to contribute, but with the Kindle, you can only purchase things from Amazon (and some of those are free or inexpensive). However, if you buy a Nook, it has access to Google Books, which also has many free public-domain books. (and obviously, you can buy books for the Nook through B&N)
Hope this helps!
Hope this helps!



Check your public library's website and see what kind of content you can download to your ereader, even Kindle, for free. Yes, even Kindles. Worth checking out if you are going broke trying to get everything you want to read!

AMazon got a lot of backlash and bad publicity when they first launched the Kindle because folks could not use them to access free books from their public libraries. They soon came to realize that they were alienating a lot of readers and now you can download library titles to a Kindle. IF your public library has ebooks available, you chould check it out.
Thanks for all the helpful info, Rose Ann! Yes, I was so happy to hear that Omaha purchased all the Persephones - now I just have to work on my public library in Minnesota! :)

When I asked my library for the Miss Buncles, they bought the Sourcebook editions. So at least I got to read them. I don't think they'd spring for Persephones.

My mistake. The Runaway is available on Google Books for free.

Thank you for sending me over to Open Library. I've found more than a hundred books that were on my general reading list. It took me a while to figure out how to get them onto my iphone app, but now I'm having so much fun I can barely stand it.
They do have Round About A Pound A Week on there, available for epub, pdf, or transfer to kindle.
https://openlibrary.org/works/OL78832...
The Squire by Enid Bagnold is there too.
https://openlibrary.org/works/OL15152...
I will keep my eyes peeled for others.

To Cynthia: I use a tablet with Android (8 inches). This way I have in one device a few different software to reading e-books: Kindle, Google Books and a software (I recommend Moon+Reader) to other ebooks (e.g. from gutenberg.org). I also read on my tablet books from OpenLibrary (through a web browser). I could also install Nooks and Kobo but as for now, I didn't see a need.
All those software to reading (and buying) are free, so there isn't a problem to install them on your tablet.

[But, I prefer to hold my tablet sitting on a couch than my laptop at my desk or on my knees on a couch.]
On The Persephone website, if you go to ebooks, they actually provide links to several of their books that are available in the public domain. I know Fidelity is on gutenberg, and Consequencesis available at Girlebooks, along with others

I usually download to my computer, then email to my kindle address, but you will have several choices of reading location. FadedPage is a Canadian site, and regularly adds titles. For Persephone, I know that Gwethalyn Graham's fabulous book Earth and High Heaven, along with her Swiss Sonata, can be found there.

https://librivox.org/
They make free audiobooks of books in the public domain, including many obscure and largely forgotten works. It is a seriously underrated resource. Hell with Audible.

https://librivox.org/
They make free audiobooks of books in the public domain, including many obscure and largely forgotten works. It is a seriously underrated resource. Hel..."
I love LibriVox too. And some readers (voices) are marvelous. (Alas, there are also those who shouldn't read for the public.)

Books mentioned in this topic
Fidelity (other topics)Consequences (other topics)
Round About a Pound a Week (other topics)
As a fan of older works that are frequently out of print & not yet available on the public domain (those that are less than 75 y/o), I've found a couple of online websites that have decent prices and with whom I've done satisfactory business. I hope this info will help in your search for a favorite book that's now out of print. Happy Reading!
Alabris Books:http://www.alibris.com/
Thrift Books: http://www.thriftbooks.com/
And for those books that are available on the public domain as they're 75 years old or older, my favorite site is Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/