217 comments

  • fernly 12 hours ago

    A bit of context regarding Project Gutenberg. Its intake process is far from casual. Take a look at Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders (PGDP, [0],[1]), one of the oldest "crowd-sourcing" projects on the net (est. 2000). As you can see from [0], every book goes through three rounds of proofing, where volunteers read each page of text and compare it to the scanned image; then through two rounds of format review, where other volunteers insert or review format markup.

    From that 5-pass process the marked-up text is handed to a volunteer "post-processor" who assembles the final HTML or e-book file; then the completed book gets one more "smooth reading" pass before it is posted to PG.

    This it the process that produces the books input to Standard Ebooks. That they can still find scanner errors ("tne" for "the", a typical "scanno") demonstrates how difficult it is to see those. But their presence isn't from carelessness or disregard for the value of the books.

    In the 20-teens I put in hundreds of volunteer hours at PGDP in all the above roles, and it was very satisfying work. I'd recommend it to anyone wanting an online hobby that feels constructive. Volunteering time to Standard Ebooks would probably feel good as well.

    [0] https://www.pgdp.net/c/activity_hub.php

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_Proofreaders

    • executesorder66 23 minutes ago

      > In the 20-teens

      That being 2013 to 2019?

    • contact9879 11 hours ago

      The work done by Distributed Proofreaders is pretty amazing. I try to contribute my 35 pages as often as I can. The backlog there is pretty insane even while finishing upwards of 150 ebooks per month

      it truly is an "online hobby that feels constructive". you get these tiny glimpses into our shared literary/cultural history while knowing that the work you're doing is for the benefit of all (benefit of the public domain)

      • zozbot234 an hour ago

        > The backlog there is pretty insane even while finishing upwards of 150 ebooks per month

        Isn't the backlog there mostly in the post-processing step, though? To the point where they're taking finished texts and running them again through the page-by-page proofreading in hope of fishing out more OCR typos and improving the format markup?

        You can also contribute at Wikisource if you prefer, that doesn't really have a post-processing step and has much less of a fixed pipeline. (There are explicit "proofreading" and "verification" steps per page, but not much beyond that.)

    • Arcorann 8 hours ago

      In a similar vein, there is Wikisource.[0] Wikisource has the advantage of allowing for extensive formatting to closely match the source works due to its wiki-based format, but doesn't have quite as robust processes. Its flexibility is unparalleled though -- it covers virtually any form of scanned print work and even some old movies, and contributors can focus on whatever niches they're interested in if they want.

      [0] https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Main_Page

    • HexPhantom 5 hours ago

      I think a lot of people (my past self included) underestimate how much meticulous, behind-the-scenes work goes into something like PGDP

    • brador an hour ago

      The amount of this that could be trivially automated fills me with rage.

      Even just automated flagging of common errors would save 1000s of volunteer hours.

    • zem 10 hours ago

      out of curiosity, wouldn't an automated spell check pass help catch ocr errors? e.g. "tne" would be caught immediately.

      • generationP 9 hours ago

        The most confusing errors are the ones spellcheck doesn't catch because they transform a word into a valid word. But it's them that we want the least.

        • zem 9 hours ago

          true, it wouldn't do a 100% job, but it would be another line of defense. the reason I was wondering about it was that the gp cited an example that was easy for humans to miss, but would be caught at once with a spell checker.

          there are also statistical methods to detect words that are changed into other, valid words - check out the grammar checker in google docs for instance. again, not 100%, but every bit helps.

          • Wurdan 6 hours ago

            It would probably also throw out a lot of false positives which would take time to check. Especially in works of fiction, writers could take liberties with non-standard spelling.

      • pulkitsh1234 6 hours ago

        An LLM-based spellchecker would've caught it for sure. I am working on one here: https://github.com/pulkitsharma07/spelltastic.io, If anyone has suggestions on how this can help in Project Gutenberg / Standard Ebook's workflows, please reach out to me / open an issue.

        I have seen that LLMs are pretty good at understanding context/domain / theme-specific terms, so their spellchecking is pretty good.

      • contact9879 9 hours ago

        the distributed proofreaders process does include a mandatory spellcheck

  • acabal a day ago

    Editor-in-chief here, happy to answer any questions, as always. We also recently celebrated Public Domain Day with an especially notable crop of books, including The Sound and the Fury, All Quiet on the Western Front, John Steinbeck's first novel, some Hemingway, Gandhi, two Dashiell Hammett novels, and more: https://standardebooks.org/blog/public-domain-day-2025

    • frereubu 20 hours ago

      Another question - in https://standardebooks.org/contribute/producing-an-ebook-ste... you talk about "modernising" spelling, e.g. changing "some one" to "someone". This may be against the implicit goal of making these accessible for a general reader, but I prefer to read what was originally written, and it feels like it crosses a line into editorialising rather than letting the original feel stand as-is. (Although of course these texts have already been "editorialised" by their original editors!) Totally your decision given the amount of effort that has clearly gone into this, but I'd be interested to read the rationale for that decision.

      • idoubtit 17 hours ago

        I respect this choice of modernization, and I suppose some readers enjoy it, but it makes the publisher's whole work useless to me. When a text has been altered, I can't trust it respects the intent of the author, and any style inconsistency I find may be a by-product of the publisher's mangling.

        So, when I care about a book, I never read Standard Ebooks' edition.

        By the way, the modernization is more than joining a few words. Sometimes, Standard Ebooks replaces the word used at the time the book was written. For instance:

            This time, however, the mountain was going to [-Mahomet;-]{+Muhammad;+}
        
        The previous quote is from Galsworthy's "Forsyte Saga". The author used many French words and French spellings – like "Tchekov" for the Russian playwriter that was living in Paris. These subtleties are lost with the modernization.

        I also think some alterations are plain mistakes. For instance in the same book:

            if she wanted a good book she should read [-“Job”-]{+Job+};
            his father was rather like Job while Job still had land.
        • philsnow 4 hours ago

          > I also think some alterations are plain mistakes. For instance in the same book:

          That one appears to not be a mistake, [0] suggests that not quoting the name of the book of the bible being referred to (so [Job] rather than ["Job"]) is the style accepted by Chicago, MLA, and APA.

          [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_citation#Common_formats

        • KennyBlanken 17 hours ago

          Anyone who has read books for classes in high school and above knows that even classics are routinely fucked with by publishers. Even early in the work's history. I remember even in middle school someone would invariably end up with a different publisher's edition of a book for summer reading or whatnot and we'd find changes.

          Unless the book is specifically declared to be the original text - and it may have to specify which original text - they're going to be edited.

          However, in electronic form it should be possible to include both in one file, or two files with the original in a repo branch once all the document structure stuff has been added. That text will never change, so merging formatting-only changes should be pretty painless.

          • bentley 5 hours ago

            For every book, Standard Ebooks provides a hyperlink to the original scan, a hyperlink to the original transcription, and a full revision history in which all spelling updates have been clearly marked. To me, this already seems to be going above and beyond—most ebook repositories provide less. I can’t imagine that the marginal benefit from keeping multiple parallel branches would be worth the cost in volunteer time and labor, when maintaining pristine first editions isn’t even a goal of the project.

          • franga2000 5 hours ago

            And of course, none of this matters in the slightest for translated works, which almost by definition includes the vast majority of works ever written.

            "As it was written" is a very high bar that is simply not attainable for anything other than fairly recent works in your native language.

      • acabal 20 hours ago

        That's fine! Our editions didn't erase any of the other editions you can find online and in print. You're more than welcome to select any edition that fits your reading preferences.

        • frereubu 20 hours ago

          Apologies if that came across as at all critical. Genuinely interested in the rationale rather than it being a how-dare-you demand for you to explain yourself!

          • acabal 19 hours ago

            Spelling varies widely across the eras our ebooks were published in. Therefore we attempt to standardize spelling to what a modern reader might be familiar with. We only make sound-alike changes, like to-morrow -> tomorrow.

            This is a common practice that editors and publishers have quietly engaged in for centuries. For example, today you are not reading Shakespeare in the way it was spelled in its first printing.

            • wpollock 15 hours ago

              A wonderful project!

              After reading this comment I couldn't help but picture medieval monks, toiling away copying old manuscripts into "modern" English. Normally a thankless task, so thank you!

            • harshreality 12 hours ago

              Is there epub-specific html markup you could add to changed words to indicate their original spelling? Like alt text for images, but in a span around a word? There's the html "title" attribute, of course, which would work (mouseover shows the title attribute's value), but that isn't semantically correct for the purpose.

              • acabal 11 hours ago

                No, there are too many things to track, but all of it is in the git history. Editorial changes have a commit message prefaced with [Editorial].

            • cenamus 19 hours ago

              And you're for sure not speaking it like he would have

            • frereubu 19 hours ago

              Fair enough - thanks for the explanation.

            • thoroughburro 10 hours ago

              > For example, today you are not reading Shakespeare in the way it was spelled in its first printing.

              However, we call modernised Shakespeare “abridged”.

              • wlonkly 9 hours ago

                Abridged means shortened, not modernized.

        • Alive-in-2025 14 hours ago

          I appreciate this service you are doing, but it would be much much better to also have an original version with archaic spelling. Double bonus points for have optional (hidden by default) explanations of words. This would be tremendously helpful to some students.

    • sbarre 21 hours ago

      What's the point of including books that aren't public domain yet in your collections?

      It makes it hard to browse those collections to find actual books to read. The first 3 series I clicked on all said "not P.D." (which at first I didn't know what "P.D" meant - remember your audience does not have your level of familiarity with your context, perhaps a tooltip on that badge would help)..

      Then I see "this book will enter public domain in 2050"..

      I commend you for this project, it's really awesome work.. From a user's experience, it would be great to have a filter on your various lists that restricts only to books that are available, and excludes these books that are not yet in your collection.

      • acabal 20 hours ago

        In addition to what Robin mentioned below, some of these placeholders are for books on our Wanted list. I also think it's useful to show readers that particular books are looking for volunteers to produce, and also to show that some books they might want are locked away by copyright for possibly decades. In that sense it's partly a political message.

        • salviati 19 hours ago

          It sounds like implementing the filter gp suggested would still send the political message though.

      • robin_reala 21 hours ago

        Whenever we add a collection, the books that are in that collection but not yet in PD in the US get placeholders. But a filter might not be a bad idea.

    • frereubu 20 hours ago

      I love this. However, I couldn't find an alphabetical list of authors, which is the way I wanted to browse on my first visit. Instead my only option is to show 48 on a page and paginate through, which is tedious. I know there are author pages - e.g. https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/william-makepeace-thackera... - so I presume it's feasible. An author index would significantly increase my likelihood of understanding what's available and engaging with the content.

    • loloquwowndueo a day ago

      Which ebook reader works well with standard ebooks in 2025?

      (More concretely my reader is a 2nd-gen kindle which is basically useless these days and I’d love an idea of something that can display standard ebooks with all their advanced formatting)

      Thanks!

      • jussih 9 minutes ago

        I recently purchased a Pocketbook Era. It is pretty much the perfect device for me - supports open standards and does not require any cloud account signups to start using it. It is not hostile to the user, 3rd party applications such as Koreader can be simply dropped in and they appear in the menus without any shenanigans like jailbreaking or custom launchers needed.

        In my ideal world all devices would be like this.

      • acabal a day ago

        I read on an old Kobo, using Kepub files. Their Kepub renderer is quite good.

        I think Kindle's renderer hasn't changed significantly for many years, and it had always been pretty bad. I always say that Kindle seems to have been created by people who hate books.

        The best renderer around is iBooks on an iPad, which as far as I can tell uses an up-to-date Webkit.

        • _emacsomancer_ 19 hours ago

          I'd suggest KOReader, on various devices, as the best renderer and interface.

          • avhon1 10 hours ago

            I read standard .epub files with KOReader on my Kobo Aura H2O. It's faster, nicer-looking, and more customizable than the stock reader, and the installation instructions were complete, correct, and easy to follow.

        • loloquwowndueo 20 hours ago

          Thanks! I don’t like reading on a backlit screen (hurts the eyes) so iPad is a no-go, but a kobo would probably work!

          • CarterATX 18 hours ago

            Kobo Libra 2 is a great e-reader. Works well one-handed (screen rotates for left/right hands), has buttons for page turns. Integrates with Overdrive (what Libby uses). Drawbacks are Kobo's bookstore is weaker than Amazon/Apple. Screen is also not flush which means some dust can collect in the recess.

        • ssbash 10 hours ago

          I also use a Kobo and occasionally an iPad. Do you know if it's possible to sync progress between the two.

          I've been meaning to try calibre-web, but I'm doubtful iBooks will support OPDS.

      • turrican 20 hours ago

        A note for Kobo users: a lot of us (myself included) use Calibre to manage and upload our ebooks. Something about Calibre messes up Kepub files and strips out a lot of the formatting (including the book’s cover).

        If I want to appreciate a nice Kepub from Standard Ebooks, I upload it directly to the Kobo.

      • wyclif a day ago

        A Kobo would be a great choice. I use a Kobo Libra 2 and love it a lot more than my old Kindle Paperwhite that got stolen: https://gl.kobobooks.com/products/kobo-libra-2 The Kobo Sage is also good because it has an 8" screen.

        Standard eBooks offers kepub format for Kobo devices and files, they use their advanced Webkit-based renderer: https://standardebooks.org/help/how-to-use-our-ebooks#kobo-f...

        • loloquwowndueo a day ago

          What did you do with purchased books you had in your kindle? Rebuy them? Just “let them go”?

          Thanks for the recommendation!

          • wyclif a day ago

            Fortunately, I had them backed up to a cloud folder. I remember almost deciding not to go to the trouble to back them up, but isn't that how it always works with backups? The Kobo also works with epub.

      • kps 19 hours ago

        Piggybacking: for computers, what is a good epub viewer?

        What I'm personally looking for:

        - Linux and/or OS X

        - No ‘import’ requirement (a viewer, not a collection manager)

        - Single page or continuous (no forced double spread)

        - No required animations

        - At least basic control over font size, spacing, margins.

        - Keyboard navigation (at least next/previous page)

        • jzb 17 hours ago

          Check out Foliate, it's a really nice reader and Standard Ebooks display quite nicely using Foliate IMO.

        • opan 2 hours ago

          Zathura is nice. Has vim bindings and a minimal UI.

        • buu709 19 hours ago

          For Linux, Foliate is very nice.

        • tehnub 18 hours ago

          Apple Books on macOS is pretty nice

        • skydhash 18 hours ago

          That’s calibre viewer, but it may require some customization to get something nice. Foliate is ok, but it’s a library. i’d say that’s OK because epub is a zip file and you need to extract it to read it.

        • boredhedgehog 19 hours ago

          Alexandria.

        • carlosjobim 19 hours ago

          OS X: FB Reader

      • rodolphoarruda 13 hours ago

        For Android, Moon Reader Pro.

        Unmatched UI tweaking features which make reading a pleasure. Syncs bookmarks with cloud services, thus across different devices.

      • carlosjobim 19 hours ago

        My Kindle is 8 years old and works excellent with standard ebooks. I think you can select any device that you prefer and it will be good.

        • loloquwowndueo 27 minutes ago

          Oh so you have one of the new Kindles!!

          For reference my gen 2 kindle is 16 years old.

    • Erlangen a day ago

      Hi, Alex. Is there anyway to browser the ebooks filtered by languages? I tried to find some texts in French, but it doesn't seem to have any.

      • acabal a day ago

        Standard Ebooks only works on English-language books, as typography varies between languages and we're only experts in English.

        • philistine 21 hours ago

          I can tell you there is a lot of appetite for other languages. I looked at the project and the amount of stuff that would need to be rewritten to work with multiple languages was daunting. I would consider working on making your documentation and workflow functional with multiple languages.

          • acabal 21 hours ago

            Lots of people have tried similar projects in other languages but as far as I know none have persevered.

            Personally I think it's important to have one person in charge who is able to approve of the quality of all the project's output; for now, at SE, that person is me and I'm only an expert in English.

            • colonwqbang 19 hours ago

              Project Runeberg seems to be still going after 30-odd years.

              • robin_reala 16 hours ago

                Project Runeberg is trying to be a nordic Project Gutenberg, not a nordic Standard Ebooks.

            • philistine 11 hours ago

              Enlightening comment!

      • LtWorf a day ago

        Same for me. I think it's english only.

    • theyinwhy 17 hours ago

      Great work! Gutenberg project books have always been a pain to read. Thank you for caring!

    • jayanmn 19 hours ago

      I am from India. Could you add local UPI based donation option at some point? Not everyone has card here.

    • mourner 17 hours ago

      Wonderful project! One thing I wish the website would have is being able to find the right book to read out of this enormous list — e.g. showing / sorting by Goodreads ratings (which I realize you might not want to do), or at least having some kind of a "Featured" section with the most critically acclaimed / must read books of the project on one page.

      • cxr 10 hours ago

        There are around a dozen collections on the (not prominently featured) collections page[1] like Le Monde's 100 Best Books of the Century and Modern Library's 100 Best Novels, etc.

        1. <https://standardebooks.org/collections>

    • sgustard 11 hours ago

      Steinbeck was the first name I searched for, so this was great to see even if his major works won't be available for some time. I do wonder how badly the Steinbeck or Faulkner estates are hurt by the sudden loss of royalties? Imagine working hard to write a book to make a living and then just under a hundred years it's taken away from you. Also, AI.

    • HexPhantom 5 hours ago

      Really appreciate the work Standard Ebooks puts into making these texts not just available, but readable

    • agiacalone 16 hours ago

      Been using Standard Ebooks for a while now, but wanted to drop by here and say how great this site is! It's replaced P.G. for me (for whatever is on this site, at least) and I like the much nicer formatting on the texts. It's great on both my physical Kindle and Apple Books on my iPhone.

    • bodantogat a day ago

      Is there an API or downloadable catalog of the titles? Happy to feature them on meetnewbooks.com so more readers can find them.

    • crorella 12 hours ago

      In your opinion, what is the ebook reader you like the most ?

    • htunnicliff 19 hours ago

      I’d love to know more about the pattern of keeping each book in individual repos, rather than in a singular repo.

      • acabal 19 hours ago

        Each repo is a history of the ebook including editorial changes, typos fixes, and the like. Having a single repo containing thousands of ebooks and their histories would be pretty annoying to browse.

      • remus 19 hours ago

        Presumably to keep the repo size reasonable. Say I want to make an ad hoc contribution to a book, if step 1 is "download this multi-gigabyte repo" then that's a fairly big hurdle.

    • fauria 19 hours ago

      Roughly speaking, how long does it take you to produce a single ebook?

      • acabal 19 hours ago

        Once you're very familiar with the process, you could get a draft of a basic prose novel ready for proofreading in a few hours. Then it has to be proofread and completed.

        Beginners, and people working on more advanced books, can take much, much, much longer.

      • contact9879 19 hours ago

        it varies widely depending on the length and type of book and how much free time the volunteer has to devote to it

        Anywhere between 1 week for the simplest (straight narrative, not too much verse or endnotes) and ~1 year (thousands of endnotes, pages of verse, drama, in-line references to book titles, use of technical terms, etc)

    • greenie_beans 20 hours ago

      ooo tempted to reprint faulkner as part of a small press, thanks for the idea

  • ssttoo a day ago

    I recently started on my first title contribution to the project, it’s a rewarding experience https://github.com/stoyan/edith-wharton_the-custom-of-the-co... It’s HTML all the way down

    The step-by-step: https://standardebooks.org/contribute/producing-an-ebook-ste...

    In a nutshell: start with a Project Gutenberg text, clean it up to a high standard, have it peer reviewed and published

    • Touche a day ago

      Love this. So many in the archivist community are only interested in preservation and don't care at all about making the material accessible. Love to see a project like this prioritizing the latter.

      • stog a day ago

        You’re spot on with this. I recently converted a local history book from 1911 to Markdown, ePub and HTML and tracked the changes on GitHub. Only a handful of copies of this book exist in physical form and it has been photo copied (which is great).

        However, I was completely shot down by the local library when I was discussing it with them. They said they already had a photo copy and didn’t need anymore digital editions, I tried to explain the benefits of having it in a machine readable format but they wouldn’t entertain it. I completed the project for me, so I wasn’t too bothered, but thought they might have been interested in archiving it but they weren’t.

        My general feeling is that they didn’t like an outsider contributing and touching on a format they didn’t know so got slightly defensive.

        • badlibrarian 20 hours ago

          Find an archive and make sure they're aware of the work you've done. Archivists always love meeting people who've done good work in the space they're in. Especially when they have some tech chops which is desperately lacking in the space.

          Beyond that, if the material is public domain, that library is called The Internet. Post it and promote it. The only reason to seek association with a library is if you're looking for cred for some reason, and that's not the business they're in.

          If it's not public domain, or if you haven't marked your derivative work public domain, then you put a library in an awkward position. Realize that these are the types of people who still post little notes by the copy machines saying what's permissible and enjoy policing it.

          Most just say no for the same reason that Hollywood returns ideas and scripts unopened. They're busy and the cost/benefit isn't there.

          Although the self-described online ones tend to play fast and loose, real librarians have a formal code of ethics which is worth reviewing.

          https://www.ala.org/tools/ethics

        • simpaticoder a day ago

          Interesting. I wonder if libraries suffer a supply-chain risk and so avoid taking contributions from (non-vetted) individuals? I imagine that over time a library gets lots of offers to take "important works of literature" from cranks, and perhaps they've developed this culture to protect them from that. Pure speculation, of course.

          • badlibrarian 20 hours ago

            Libraries typically don't even accept print books or CDs/DVDs. If there's a donation bin outside it probably isn't even theirs. And if stuff actually winds up with them, it just gets sold off so they can purchase material via vetted channels.

            https://www.betterworldbooks.com/go/donate

        • raybb 17 hours ago

          Thanks for doing this. We need more people to take initiative like this!

        • pajop 21 hours ago

          can you share the links to your project?

    • frereubu 20 hours ago

      Do you "claim" a book, to make sure that no-one else is trying to work on the same book? I presume that's part of step 4 in your link, given that it would be heartbreaking to get 90% of the way through and then be beaten to it by someone who'd started at roughly the same time!

  • miles a day ago

    Some of the higher ranking previous discussions:

    2017, 441 points, 97 comments https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14570035

    2019, 820 points, 131 comments https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20594802

    2022, 1578 points, 256 comments https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32215324

    2024, 701 points, 154 comments https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38831219

  • Sverigevader a day ago

    It's thanks to this site that I learned that Kobo uses a really bad renderer for epubs unless converted to their own ebook format (Kepub). It make a huge difference in appearance and performance on a Kobo device.

    https://standardebooks.org/help/how-to-use-our-ebooks#kobo-f...

    • Uvix 19 hours ago

      You don't even have to convert it, just rename the extension to .kepub.epub. https://github.com/kobolabs/epub-spec?tab=readme-ov-file#sid...

      • acabal 19 hours ago

        This is not entirely correct - Kobo also expects a bunch of special <span>s inserted for things like highlighting and page numbers to work.

        It kills me that Kobo is so close to having plain epubs rendered with Webkit but for some reason they just won't take the leap!

    • stog a day ago

      I discovered this too. However, I now use Plato Reader on my Kobo with standard ePub and it’s lovely.

    • crtasm a day ago

      I assume KOReader has a better renderer for epub but will have to test how it compares to the stock software+kepub. So far I've only used KOReader on my device.

      • contact9879 a day ago

        the only issues i've found with koreader is its default margin size and its display of standard ebooks' titlepages but (I believe) these can be fixed with a fairly simple user tweaks css

        • _emacsomancer_ 19 hours ago

          You can set default margins in the user interface of KOReader too.

    • lazyeye 17 hours ago

      You can use kepubify to convert epubs to kepubs (and calibre will do this as well)

      https://pgaskin.net/kepubify/

      • _shantaram 3 hours ago

        And https://send.djazz.se automatically performs the conversion for you with kepubify and sends it to your ereader! No affiliation, just a happy camper chiming in

    • RVuRnvbM2e a day ago

      Wow I never knew this!

      • robin_reala a day ago

        Yeah, if you just load normal epubs it defaults to an old version of Adobe Digital Editions unfortunately.

  • kseistrup 21 hours ago

    I love Standard Ebooks.

    See also Global Grey ebooks: https://www.globalgreyebooks.com/ One woman has formatted hundreds of ebooks herself.

  • macmac 41 minutes ago

    Does anyone know why the beautiful covers disappear when I import these books in standard format into Calibre?

  • Animats a day ago

    Most of the big print-on-demand companies will now make hardcovers, for about $10. You can't feed raw Gutenberg files into those mills, but these "standard ebooks" have enough formatting info for that. So that would be a useful service.

    • m-hodges 15 hours ago

      What are some examples of companies that do this?

  • SamBam 20 hours ago

    Are there any non-English books? When I go to the search page, language isn't even a pull-down option, so I'm guessing not.

    There is a huge world of out-of-copyright non-English texts, and Project Gutenberg has many thousands of them. I wonder if any interest could be generated to help bring them in by posting on foreign language subreddits or something.

    • slevis 20 hours ago

      Just looked through the entire website to answer this question. Seems like they only accept english books :( "Types of ebooks we don’t accept: - Non-English-language books. Translations to English are, of course, OK." (https://standardebooks.org/contribute/collections-policy)

      • SamBam 20 hours ago

        Weird. Why the explicit rule against them?

        I understand if the existing editors can't personally proofread the submissions, but that's why peer-review exists. Or an open-source project in general where people can post corrections. Jimbo Wales didn't need to speak a hundred languages to launch Wikipedia.

        • contact9879 20 hours ago

          To me, that niche is already covered by Wikisource. Standard Ebooks as a project is very strict about conforming to its editorial and quality standards. On boarding more languages would require volunteer editorial experts in those languages.

          Besides, projects in other languages can absolutely build upon Standard Ebooks work, but to expect Standard Ebooks itself to support other languages is just too outside the scope and expertise of the volunteers available.

          • kelvinjps10 17 hours ago

            If you were to find the expert editors for the other languages would you let them publish the works in those other languages on standards books website?

            • contact9879 16 hours ago

              well, that would be up to Alex. but as that would require a pretty substantial organizational and responsibility shift, I imagine, no, he would not.

              As it is now, Alex is editorially responsible for all output of Standard Ebooks. Changing that would require someone with the time and experience willing to take on all the responsibilities that Alex currently has for each of those other languages.

        • npteljes 19 hours ago

          A well-defined focus can help management of a project, for example, by not having the participants spread too thin.

          The website and toolchain are open source, so if someone would build an international version, and do it persistently, I'm sure they would link or maybe even merge the projects a bit.

        • kmoser 20 hours ago
  • HexPhantom 5 hours ago

    Love that they're using Git and keeping everything open. It's rare to see such a thoughtful blend of literary love and modern tooling

  • virtualritz a day ago

    That website is hopefully not an indication of how these ebooks will look on my mobile.

    A screenshot from the typography section:

    https://ibb.co/nqhyTR3M

    • acabal 20 hours ago

      The manual has some known issues on mobile, I believe there's a GitHub issue open about it. It's low priority because the manual is rarely read on mobile. PRs welcomed!

    • contact9879 a day ago

      if you're reading a style manual it might :)

      but no, the manual itself is not really mobile-friendly. you can check what an actual ebook would look like though:

      https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/louis-couperus/the-tour/al...

      • virtualritz a day ago

        Much too tight leading for a book text.

        This is a leading you'd see on the ingredients list of an energy bar packaging.

        The other choices are fine.

        Caveat: I studied typography and worked in that field for a decade.

        • contact9879 a day ago

          the online view is not the primary way readers are expected to read the ebooks. downloading the epub and reading on an ereader (edit: where line height and font size are customizable) is the expected and best supported method

          however, contributions are very welcome and everything is hosted on GitHub if you'd like to suggest improvements; or send your thoughts on the mailing list

          • SamBam 20 hours ago

            But if they have an online view, why not make it readable? The suggestion above about the line height is presumably a 1-line CSS change.

            • contact9879 20 hours ago

              presumably, which is why i encouraged submitting a note to the mailing list or the standardebooks/web repo on github

              • virtualritz 19 hours ago

                I think the point of parent was that the issue, the too narrow leading, is not a change that needs debating. On a mailing list, issue tracker or whatever.

                Or if you think it actually was, this was not a project that I'd want to get involved in.

                As someone who reads mostly ePubs, many of which suffer from issues this project aims to fix, I mean that in a very caring way.

                • contact9879 18 hours ago

                  i also don't think it needs debating. my point was that the issue, the too narrow leading in the online view, is just not going to be fixed unless someone points it out to someone that can fix it. if that's you, great! you can submit a PR to the git repo. or, if don't have the time or want to have to go find where the line height is defined, submitting a comment to the mailing list or noting it on the issue tracker will let a volunteer fix it

                  from my own experience, Alex is very amenable to improvements. the online view of the ebooks is just not used by probably anyone to actually read the books (just use an ereader app or device its a way better experience anyway) and because of that no one has cared to point it out until now

  • tcoff91 19 hours ago

    For those who are into ebooks and audiobooks, I’ve been having a blast with the app Storyteller: https://storyteller-platform.gitlab.io/storyteller/

    You can self host the server, and it will create epub3s with the audiobook and ebook synced up.

    Then you use the mobile app to listen and read the books. It works way better than whispersync from kindle.

    Read on your boox e reader then switch to your phone and listen and everything syncs up seamlessly.

    • tass 19 hours ago

      Where do you find the books to host?

      Also your link has an erroneous .com

      • tcoff91 17 hours ago

        You can get drm free audiobooks from libro and you can strip drm from kindle and audible books with calibre and libation.

  • thangalin 11 hours ago

    https://dave.autonoma.ca/blog/2020/04/11/project-gutenberg-p...

    > Of all these projects, the most amenable to automatic typesetting are those produced by Standard Ebooks and HTML Writers Guild. The benefit of using HTML Writers Guild is their semantic markup and simple document type definition (DTD) file. Standard Ebooks, as the name suggests, are brilliantly standardized and have an excellent Manual of Style that describes what to expect from the XHTML.

  • LordGronk a day ago

    I would love this if it were to produce viable unabridged ebooks of Francis Parkman’s “France and England in North America” vol 2-7. All the existent digital editions were poorly scanned and don’t separate footnotes from the main text.

    • poidos a day ago

      If you have the cash, you can pay them to do so! Scroll down to “SPONSOR A NEW EBOOK”:

      https://standardebooks.org/donate

      > Sponsoring a new ebook of your choice calls for a donation of $900 + $0.02 per word over the first 100,000

      • squigz a day ago

        I love this project and don't want to disparage the work that goes into it, but 900 USD, and it has to be a book that is already transcribed online? That seems a bit much to me.

        • hombre_fatal 20 hours ago

          You’re paying a human to remaster the book word for word and hand transform it into epub html paragraph by paragraph.

          How much less would you do it for?

        • eesmith a day ago

          That sounds quite reasonable to me. That's about what a freelance proofreader charges to edit a book, if https://thewritelife.com/how-much-to-pay-for-a-book-editor/ is correct, and that's working with a (likely Word) document which isn't poorly scanned from paper.

        • carlosjobim 19 hours ago

          If you pooled the funds with 10 other people who want the book, it would be $90 each. Or imagine pooling it with 100 people.

    • acabal a day ago

      You can also join our Patrons Circle to have this book added to our Wanted Ebooks list, which is a list of suggestions for our volunteers to work on: https://standardebooks.org/donate#patrons-circle

  • neves 8 hours ago

    I really miss some kind of organization. I can't find a most downloaded page, or even some recommendations lists.

  • opto a day ago

    Looks like a great project, and one sorely needed by people like me who find themselves trying to get hold of old books they can't get in their local library and that are too expensive to buy secondhand.

    • mariusor a day ago

      As far as I know Standard gets their raw ebooks from Project Gutenberg which has a vastly greater collection of public domain works. What they're doing is typesetting them for the average reader. But if all you're looking for is just the content, Gutenberg is the place to look for ethically clean copies.

    • HexPhantom 4 hours ago

      Tracking down older or out-of-print books can be weirdly frustrating, especially when prices for secondhand copies get absurd

    • carlosjobim a day ago

      The shadow libraries such as Anna's Archive are a treasure trove of old books, and you're not breaking any imaginary law by downloading old books which are out of copyright.

      • zozbot234 a day ago

        If a book is out of copyright you can usually find the scan on Internet Archive. No need to look elsewhere at all.

        • ZeroGravitas a day ago

          The internet archive's open library will also link to Standard Ebooks (and Gutenberg and a few others) if a version exists of a book you are looking at e.g.:

          https://openlibrary.org/books/OL37044523M/The_Woodlanders

        • notpushkin 17 hours ago

          If a book is still in copyright, chances are you’ll find it there as well.

          Scans suck though, even a badly OCR’ed EPUB is way better.

      • charcircuit a day ago

        The scans can have a different copyright date than the book itself.

        • eesmith a day ago

          There is no copyright on scans.

          Scanning is not transformative and does not result in a derivative work which can is protected by copyright law.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Scanning_an_image_do...

          https://law.stackexchange.com/questions/1214/who-owns-a-copy... points us to read the Compendium of US Copyright Office Practices at https://www.copyright.gov/comp3/docs/compendium.pdf

          > 313.4(A) Mere Copies

          > A work that is a mere copy of another work of authorship is not copyrightable. The Office cannot register a work that has been merely copied from another work of authorship without any additional original authorship. See L. Batlin & Son, 536 F.2d at 490 (“one who has slavishly or mechanically copied from others may not claim to be an author”); Bridgeman Art Library, Ltd. v. Corel Corp., 36 F. Supp. 2d 191, 195 (S.D.N.Y. 1999) (“exact photographic copies of public domain works of art would not be copyrightable under United States law because they are not original”).

          • charcircuit a day ago

            A pdf file can contain more than just the raw images of the pages.

            • eesmith a day ago

              Certainly! If you add my latest Kirk/Spock slash fanfic to the end of the text, then that is transformative, so the resulting PDF is covered under copyright.

              But you wrote "scan". Adding an OCR'ed text layer, or doing manual proofreading and layout ("sweat of the brow") is not sufficiently transformative to have copyright protection.

              And we were specifically talking about scans of old books stored in shadow libraries.

  • kpjas a day ago
    • grues-dinner a day ago

      It's not very obvious, but Wikisource provides EPUBs via the Tools menu for every book.

  • rr808 18 hours ago

    I like the idea. I read a bunch of classics from Gutenberg. In reality so many old books are very long and boring I ended up getting more modern books from the library instead.

    Maybe TikTok ruined me but maybe these things really do literally have a shelf life. Hopefully reformatting will help. Perhaps a better way to review and find the gems would be most helpful..

    • TomasBM 14 hours ago

      Perhaps it's not just about the 'shelf life' of a book, but also the language and style they use. The more archaic the language, and the more distant the style that the author's use, the harder it is for me to focus on the book.

      Perhaps it would be useful to have expertly abridged and modernized versions of (e)books, with interpreter's notes for each change.

      • zozbot234 14 hours ago

        > Perhaps it would be useful to have expertly abridged and modernized versions of (e)books, with interpreter's notes for each change.

        A good AI can do this for you nowadays. So if anything it's nice to have the original version available.

  • dr_dshiv 17 hours ago

    Did you ever consider making them public domain but still offering to charge optional $10 donation for download?

    I’m interested in a similar approach for a rare book library, but funding for staff is a really challenge so we want to make some kind of revenue stream.

    • contact9879 16 hours ago

      Standard Ebooks grew out of a pay-what-you-want experiment that Alex did ~10 years ago

  • dalanmiller 12 hours ago

    I love Standard Ebooks! It is such a treasure! Currently enjoying Cup of Gold by John Steinbeck.

    Thank you to everyone who helps put this together!

  • fuddle 14 hours ago

    It would be great to be able to sort by popularity, to make it easier to find popular books. Or have a list of top 100 downloads.

  • pmarreck a day ago

    It surprises me that the eBook (clarification: epub) format is basically XHTML because 1) that means that every eReader needs to basically be a web browser 2) this sounds like it would make reformatting for different devices NOT easier

    • acabal a day ago

      It makes a lot of sense when you recall that HTML and its ancestors were designed to mark up and format documents, i.e. books. One of the most fundamental elements is <p>, which stands for... paragraph.

      Each renderer differs in capabilities, and most are stuck in a subset of early-2000s capabilities, so designing an ebook is very much like designing for the 90s era web. Lots of hacks are required to get the same file to look good on many different renderers, and achieving that is one of the goals of Standard Ebooks.

    • badsectoracula a day ago

      Yeah (i guess you mean epub), though in practice readers support only a tiny subset and epubs avoid using anything fancier than basic XHTML. Epubs that try to use fancy stuff (like most CSS outside of setting fonts - that readers can ignore either because they do not support it, or because the user wants to use another font) tend to not display correctly.

    • hombre_fatal 20 hours ago

      Including a web browser seems a lot easier and simpler than coming up with your own rendering system once you want to support a feature set past the trivial.

      Also, xhtml is just markup. It doesn’t mean you have to support all the possible tags and styles of modern html and css. It would be a sensible choice even if you had basic needs. You just parse it into whatever representation you want.

      • berkes 2 hours ago

        > Also, xhtml is just markup.

        And so it's not a programming language runtime (i.e. javascript or wasm), nor a css renderer, nor a bunch of web-apis.

        It's these things, not the (X)HTML parsing and rendering that makes a browser the complex thing it is.

    • contact9879 a day ago

      this also somewhat surprised me at first but I think it's obvious in hindsight, though they don't have to be a full-blown web browser (you can go read the epub specs at W3C to see what's supported)

      as for (2) I'm not sure why you think it would make it less easier? being html, text reflows automatically based on screen size, font size, line height, etc

      • pmarreck a day ago

        I guess I assumed that, for example, multi device support on websites for various device widths entails a bunch of CSS, which means the epub renderer would have to also do that, which basically means a whole web browser.

        also that things like footnotes or anything that has a floating reference (table of contents links for example) might get very complex or require javascript

        • contact9879 a day ago

          since ebooks are primarily (only?) text you don't have to worry about UI elements and such which simplifies a lot of the css

          footnotes aren't really a thing with ebooks (at least as far as displaying the note on the page with the text). Because it is just a html renderer, footnotes are presented as mutual <a> elements located in the endnotes at the end of the book

    • carlosjobim 19 hours ago

      The greatest surprise is that no popular web browser opens ePubs natively! This in 2025, where they all display PDFs, high resolution video, 3D games, etc.

      • cxr 9 hours ago

        A bigger surprise (failure) is that the EPUB folks have continued to evolve their bespoke format instead of ditching it for something that legacy browsers already know how to handle. An "EPUB" should just be a Mac-style bundle (i.e. a directory) with an XHTML file in it written to conform to a specific metadata profile.

        • duskwuff 3 hours ago

          EPUB isn't all that different from what you're describing. It's bundled as a ZIP archive with a couple of XML metadata files - and the content is split into one HTML file per chapter or section to make it easier to handle - but the idea is the same.

          • robin_reala 2 hours ago

            There’s also an epub-namespaced set of attributes which extend XHTML with ebook specific semantics. But those typically aren’t necessary for the visual representation of books.

      • robin_reala 16 hours ago

        Edge used to, until MS rebuilt it on top of Chromium. Shame.

        • mjmas 13 hours ago

          Yes, and that was a great viewer too. Having the whole book laid out horizontally rather than vertically was a good idea.

  • jimnotgym a day ago

    Is there anything similar for Audiobooks (which I wish would go back to being called Talking Books)

    • kybernetikos a day ago

      Librivox https://librivox.org/ is the closest I know.

    • cdrini 19 hours ago

      I would also recommend using Microsoft Edge's built-in ReadAloud (TTS) on standard ebooks. They have a mind boggling number of hyper realistic voices; more than any other browser I've tested.

  • sandreas a day ago

    What I'm missing in modern ebooks (like epub format) is more metadata. Who's talking (character data)? What emotional aspects does the scene have (angry, happy, sad, in a hurry)? Where does the conversation take place (geodata)?

    I'd love to see at least:

      - character: ID, Name, Gender, Age
      - mood: ID, Name (Happy, Sad, Angry, ...)
      - place: ID, Name, Acoustic (Outside, Inside, Cave, ...)
    
    This could be prepared by the author, work as a glossary, enrich the whole ebook experience and also would be a great preparation to teach AI voices how to convert a book into an audiobook.
    • huhkerrf 16 hours ago

      What's the point of reading a book, then? The joy of reading fiction is to try to understand the humanity in the scene. I don't need the author to force feed me all of these details. I want to wrestle with the answers, to try to grasp what it might mean.

    • HexPhantom 4 hours ago

      The challenge would be balancing that metadata richness without turning the book into a spreadsheet, but if done well (maybe opt-in layers or a toggle), it could really deepen the experience

    • acabal a day ago

      TEI is something like that, but the amount of effort required to mark a book up like that would be astronomical.

      • xondono 21 hours ago

        Starts to sound like the kind of task an AI could do reasonably well though

        • kec 20 hours ago

          If the goal of these tags are metadata for AI consumption, and the solution to generate them is “use an AI”… what is the point?

          • roskelld 16 hours ago

            Specialization I presume, so one produces the metadata that can be consumed by another.

            Also, the thing from the above post that stood out to me would be to act as a reminder for the reader. Not so much the location and emotion, but the character data. I've often found myself wondering who the character is that's appeared in a scene, forgetting that they previously appeared earlier.

    • mjmas 13 hours ago

      That sounds like you are asking for a play.

    • hombre_fatal 20 hours ago

      If it can be derived from the book text, then LLMs or reader can already derive it.

      If it can’t be derived from the book text, then it’s extra content that probably shouldn’t be there because it came from elsewhere.

  • coopykins a day ago

    I found curious that if you order the books by reading difficulty (easier to harder) The sound and the fury is on the second place.

    • acabal a day ago

      We use the Flesch-Kincaid algorithm to calculate reading ease. For most books it works pretty well, but for avant-garde prose like The Sound and the Fury it fails pretty badly. It also considers Ulysses to be "fairly easy"!

  • reassess_blind 14 hours ago

    A sort by popularity filter would be appreciated.

    • jomohke 12 hours ago

      Some places resist this because it causes a "rich get richer" effect in popularity. But it's admittedly convenient.

  • mentalgear a day ago

    Beautifully made! Which gutenberg.org would be updated with this design & approach!

  • smallnix a day ago

    Awesome project. Gutenberg is mentioned, does this project feed back to Gutenberg?

    • aegypti a day ago

      Absolutely, from a previous discussion:

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32217313

      • miles a day ago

        As the linked comment says, it's up to the individual contributor to inform PG of any corrections; SE does not do so as a matter of course (at least, that was the case when I last contributed).

  • amelius 20 hours ago

    Do they use AI tools in their conversion workflow?

    • contact9879 20 hours ago

      No, LLMs are not used (nor would they be allowed). As for whether you would consider OCR to be AI, then... possibly?

      • kelvinjps10 17 hours ago

        Sorry for the question but how behind are the LLMs in terms of quality for something like this?

        • contact9879 16 hours ago

          I can't really answer that because I haven't actually tried to use an LLM on any part of the process. The vast majority of the process is semantic markup using (x)html and proofreading. The markup process could, I guess, use an LLM, but most of it is already automated using regex and linting.

      • UncleEntity 19 hours ago

        Does it use any automation?

        My bro-in-law supported his family as a freelance editor for years while my sister was doing the "maternity leave" thing so I know there's a non-trivial amount of work that goes into book editing. Cutting out some of that human labor seems like a good thing for a volunteer project.

        • contact9879 18 hours ago

          there is quite a lot of automated changes using standard ebooks open source tools package

          the vast majority of textual tooling is regex-galore, but there is also automated epub tooling in there too

  • tailspin2019 a day ago

    I love this. They pay attention to everything I normally despise about (many) ebooks (poor layout, lack of metadata, no chapter headings etc).

  • MilnerRoute 16 hours ago

    Another great ebook/volunteer project is Librivox - free public-domain audiobooks read by volunteers around the world...

    https://librivox.org/

    • tcoff91 15 hours ago

      You can pair these together with the Storyteller app to create an epub3 with the audio embedded and aligned to have a whispersync-esque experience

  • BoingBoomTschak a day ago

    What a great project! This should really be funded by states, states which often already have some money dedicated to the preservation of culture.

    Too bad most stuff I really like will never enter the public domain in my lifetime... well, paper and the high seas still exist!

    • contact9879 21 hours ago

      its never too late to expand your "stuff I really like" further into the public domain!

      there are whole generations of wonderful and insightful works that essentially disappeared from present consciousness for no reason other than for being old

      • thfuran 20 hours ago

        It would be better to expand the public domain. Whole generations of works were stolen by extensions of copyright.

        • contact9879 20 hours ago

          while I don't disagree, ¿por que no los dos?

  • llm_nerd a day ago

    A good initiative, but the "us vs them" framing — where the "them" are other people trying to do a service for people — gives off bad juju. It positions the value proposition by seemingly denigrating other providers of free ebooks.

    It begins with "Other free ebooks don’t put much effort into..." which sounds extremely catty.

    Maybe I'm reading too much into it, but it seems there's a way to stand on other people's shoulders and celebrate each other.

  • konstantinua00 21 hours ago

    Forbidden You don't have permission to access this resource.

    thanks for being open ...I guess

    • generationP 21 hours ago

      You're probably in some country that has longer copyright duration than the US (life+70a, which is atrocious enough). Use Tor or a proxy.