>>1262444>I was actually designing a sword for a storyFred Saberhagen wrote interesting stories about various powerful unique swords. The books of the lost swords is long out of print and most libraries don't have them unless they are digitally available ebooks. They can still be read online legally for free as part of the online library experiment at the Internet Archive. To avoid the copyright lawsuit problem, the site emulated a library with the book "checked out" and returned so that another borrower could read it. The site obtains a donated physical book, then scans it, and makes the scan available as book that can be "checked out" from the library. While the user is reading it, no one else can read it just like a physical book is checked out and in the possession of the reader.
I recommend these Saberhagen sword stories. They are written in the old stilted prose of the 1960's and 1970's, but that's part of the charm?
https://archive.org/search.php?query=fred+saberhagenBooks are navigated with arrow keys. If you click on the edges of the book, it will emulate that you are opening the thick book at that location and you'll end up at page XXX instead of page 001. ha ha They really took the physical LIBRARY BOOK emulation a bit far to avoid the copyright lawsuits.