BTW, I forgot to mention, that the Barnes and Noble website has a $5
or less section, and has a free ebook on Fridays..

I am currently reading a book about Chess records that I paid only
$3.99

Chuck (again)



On Dec 29, 4:10 pm, Chuck Dean <cadean...@gmail.com> wrote:
> iBooks and the Barnes and Noble's Nook app are both 100% accessible. I
> use both.
>
> The iBooks app has the advantage of shopping, purchasing and
> downloading directly from the app, while you need to shop and buy from
> the Barns and Noble website for Nook books.
>
> Personally, I have no problem paying for the books I read. Most books
> are around $10, and they are yours for life.
>   The physical printing of a book is a small fraction of the expense
> of manufacturing a book, so, although you may not be able to hold an
> ebook in your hand, the expenses are still there.
>
> If you read a lot, you may want to check out Book Share. Here's a
> link:https://www.bookshare.org
>
> For an annual subscription of $50 you can download as many books as
> you want. You must send them proof of disability, and the books must
> be read on a daisy book app like their own Read 2 Go.
>
> They do not have all titles, but their library is big and growing
> every day.
>
> Chuck

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