You can always add them back in the future, as any books you've bought will remain on your Purchased bookshelf. When using the Web Reader, you can access your eBook on any computer. Please note that Google eBooks are intended for personal use, and if you've opened a book in too many locations at the same time, you may be asked to close it on some machines.
No matter where you read your Google eBook, we'll keep track of your reading place, so you can pick up right where you left off on a different device. We don't support device-to-device transfers, so for each additional device you wish to use to read your Google eBook, you'll need to access the eBook from our servers.
This means that if you lose a device, you don't lose any eBooks you downloaded onto it -- you'll be able to read any Google eBooks you bought from your new device.
Once the app is downloaded to your phone or tablet, and by the time you first open the app, you'll be asked to sign in to your Google Account. Once you're logged in, you'll be able to view a list of books you've bought. When reading a book, turn pages by using a swiping motion or by touching the margin on either side. Icons on the upper right provide menu options to access the table of contents, change your viewing settings such as adjusting the font size or toggling 3-D page turns , search the book's text, or view information about the title.
You can return to the list of your books with the "My eBooks" button on the top left. Thank you for your question. Google eBooks are designed to accommodate one book per Google Account. This means that sharing books among multiple users is not currently supported. If you're using a registered eReader or smartphone, you'll download a copy of a book when you first start reading, which you can read offline. If you continue to read and download more books, your device may run out of space, at which point new books will displace the stored copies of books you haven't read recently.
Those displaced books will become available again the next time you're online. Skip to main content. You can read more about public domain books in Google Books here. Question: Does Google Books give authors and publishers a choice whether or not their books appear on the platform? Answer: Any publisher or other copyright holder can easily exclude their titles from Google Books at any time, for any reason.
We've posted the details on how to do that here and have a support team standing by to help anyone who has trouble doing it on their own. It's worth bearing in mind, however, that under no circumstances will anyone ever see a full page of an in-copyright book through Google Books without the copyright holder's permission; when a book is under copyright, we show only snippets of text surrounding the search term unless the copyright holder has given us explicit permission to show more.
Question: Do booksellers like Amazon pay to include links on Google Books? Answer: We provide links to booksellers on Google Books pages because we want to make it easier for users to buy books and for publishers to sell them. The origin of species - Charles Darwin.
Hamlet, prince of Denmark - William Shakespeare. Report a problem. Subjects: Google. Tags: books , google , how to , open access. All the major publishers are signed on and will be providing a total of around , in-copyright works, mostly likely including anything you could buy new at any other bookstore.
They also are proud to be working with university, academic, textbook, and professional publishers whose works are harder to come by. By way of a shortcut, I asked if there were any major associations or publishers that Google had not included in at least a basic partnership, and they said no. And of course there is the immense library of public domain works, over two and a half million at the moment, which swells the total Google eBooks count to around three million.
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