One Week

Our users also downloaded the following books:

All

Public Domain

Original Books

Before I Get Married

by Jim Dayton

Before I Get Married is the story of a misguided young man's trip to the altar.

Noise

by L. Lee Lowe

A short story which is also currently being filmed. Visit the film website for more details: Noise: the Film

Blood Rats

by Celestial Dung

Delightful story about Rats, Women, and Coming of Age. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike

Simon of Space

by Cheeseburger Brown

Simon Fell has awakened at a foreign star with no memory of his former life. He stands to inherit the legacy of a self he has never known. In a complex and frightening world of pioneer planets, clashing cultures...

Snowstorm

by L. Lee Lowe

short story

Diary of a Real Estate Agent

by Jon Citizen

A short story describing Day 1 in the new life of Jon Citizen. A life in real estate. When we all thought the real estate industry was as low as it could go, it just gets worse. And worse. A humourous exposé...

I Am The Box

by Pete Clark

A man wrestles with madness and reality and discovers Hell is not quite what he expected. In it, he finds friends and pain and ultimately, his calling.

The Last Great Prizefight

by Steven Frederick

The Last Great Prizefight chronicles the lives of three men, Jack Johnson, Jim Jeffries, and Tex Rickard, as they overcome corruption, racism, and despair to produce one of the most significant and intriguing...

Suburbia

by Jim Dayton

Suburbia strips away the shiny, clean veneer of suburban life exposing a layer of deceit and sin that has existed for centuries.

Statistics Don't Lie

by Jim Dayton

Statistics Don't Lie is almost the perfect summertime story... almost. There's teen romance and murder. What more could anyone want?

Telempathy

by Vance Simonds

Suppose you really knew what everyone was feeling... suppose you had a surefire way of predicting public reaction. Wouldn't you wonder, sometimes, if it could backfire?

A World Apart

by Sam Merwin

Most men of middle age would welcome a chance to live their lives a second time. But Coulter did not.