标准电子书:2026年文学作品公有领域日
Standard Ebooks: Public Domain Day 2026 in Literature

原始链接: https://standardebooks.org/blog/public-domain-day-2026

## 公有领域日2026:文化复兴 每年1月1日是公有领域日,庆祝版权到期并进入公有领域的作品——所有人都可以自由使用、分享和在此基础上创作。最初的设想是通过有限的版权期限来促进“科学进步和实用艺术”的发展,但历史上,受企业利益驱动的版权延长,几乎将文化锁定了近一个世纪。 然而,2019年标志着一个转折点,开启了创意作品重新流入公有领域的新潮流。2026年,1930年出版的书籍将被发布,其中包括威廉·福克纳、弗兰茨·卡夫卡、阿加莎·克里斯蒂、兰斯顿·休斯以及达希尔·哈梅特的《马耳他之鹰》等经典作品。 Standard Ebooks已经准备了20部这些新可用的作品作为免费电子书,以及来自Public Domain Review的资源。这种涌入是对可访问文化的重大推动,允许所有人进行混音、改编和享受。通过赞助等方式支持Standard Ebooks等组织,有助于确保持续访问这些宝贵的资源。

## 标准电子书 & 公共领域日2026 这个Hacker News讨论围绕标准电子书和即将到来的公共领域日展开,日期为2026年1月1日,届时1930年的作品将进入美国公共领域。标准电子书因其高质量的电子书版本而备受赞誉,注重精心的格式化和美观的封面艺术(通常是精美的油画)。 贡献者讨论了从纸质书籍创建电子书的过程,强调了即使使用现代OCR技术,清理工作也需要付出巨大的努力。其他人询问如何为该项目贡献力量,并提供了所需电子书列表以及项目GitHub上的帮助请求链接。 对话还涉及技术方面,例如字体嵌入(标准电子书由于许可问题不嵌入字体)以及“兼容”和“高级”EPUB格式之间的区别。用户还探讨了国际版权法的复杂性以及高质量公共领域作品未来可能成为文化内容主要来源的可能性。最后,一个相关的讨论涉及将独立作者的电子书引入公共图书馆。
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原文

Read 20 of the best books entering the public domain in 2026

The reading room of a large neoclassical reference library.

Happy Public Domain Day!

Around the world, people celebrate Public Domain Day on January 1, the day in which copyright expires on some older works and they enter the public domain in many different countries.

In the U.S. Constitution, copyright terms were meant to be very limited in order to “promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts.” The first copyright act, written in 1790 by the founding fathers themselves, set the term to be up to twenty-eight years.

But since then, powerful corporations have repeatedly extended the length of copyright to promote not the progress of society, but their profit. The result is that today in the U.S., work only enters the public domain ninety-five years after publication—locking our culture away for nearly a century.

2019 was the year in which new works were finally scheduled to enter the public domain, ending this long, corporate-dictated cultural winter. And as that year drew closer, it became clear that these corporations wouldn’t try to extend copyright yet again—making it the first year in almost a hundred years in which a significant amount of art and literature once again entered the U.S. public domain, free for anyone in the U.S. to read, use, share, remix, build upon, and enjoy.

Ever since then, January 1 has been celebrated as Public Domain Day, the day in which the next year’s crop of books, movies, music, and artwork graduates into the public domain. At Standard Ebooks, we’ve prepared some of the year’s biggest literary hits for you to read this January 1.


On January 1, 2026, books published in 1930 enter the U.S. public domain.

This includes legendary books by William Faulkner, Franz Kafka, Agatha Christie, and Langston Hughes. In addition, The Maltese Falcon, perhaps the best-known noir book—and film—of all time, and books by Evelyn Waugh, Dorothy L. Sayers, and more, enter the U.S. public domain, becoming free for anyone in the U.S. to read, use, and re-use.

Our friends at the Public Domain Review have written about some other things that enter the public domain this year, too.

These past few months at Standard Ebooks, our volunteers have been working hard to prepare a selection of the books published in 1930 in advance of Public Domain Day. We’re excited to finally be able to share these 20 new free ebooks with you!

  • A land surveyor known only as K. is summoned to a remote village to perform some work for authorities in a nearby castle. When the locals inform him that there has been a mistake, K. continues to try to make contact with the officials in the castle to complete his work, in the face of an increasingly-surreal bureaucratic nightmare.

    The Castle was incomplete at the time of Kafka’s death, and was published posthumously by his literary executor Max Brod. This 1930 translation was the book that kickstarted the English-speaking world’s interest Kafka’s uniquely oppressive and modernist style.

    Download and read for free →

  • Sam Spade is a hard-boiled detective who looks out only for himself. When a stunning femme fatale arrives at his office, Sam hesitantly takes up her case—only for his partner to be murdered during a stakeout that very night. With the police eyeing him as a suspect, Sam soon finds himeself dragged into a web of greed and lies as he hunts for a mysterious artifact rumored to be worth a fortune.

    The Maltese Falcon is one of the most famous noir detective novels ever written. Sam Spade, like the Continental Op, is the prototypical noir gumshoe—hard-drinking, cruel, but compelled to deliver justice. It was later adapted as the legendary 1941 movie starring Humphrey Bogart, which went on to become one of the most famous film noirs ever produced.

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  • Not Without Laughter is Langston Hughes’ semi-autobiographical first novel. It follows a young African-American boy growing up in rural Kansas, and how race, class, and religion shape how his community develops. The novel was published at the height of the Harlem Renaissance, a movement Hughes was instrumental in leading.

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  • When an unloved local is murdered in the small rural town of St. Mary Mead, the local vicar takes up the case. But he soon finds himself relying on the help of his gossipy neighbor—an old spinster named Miss Marple.

    While this novel technically isn’t Miss Marple’s first appearance—she was featured in a short story some years earlier—it is the first full-length story featuring the homely sleuth who would go on to become one of Christie’s most beloved characters.

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  • Mystery writer Harriet Vane is on trial for the murder of her lover, a man with unconventional opinions on anarchy and free love. The result is a hung jury, so the judge orders a retrial—the perfect opportunity for Lord Peter Wimsey to unravel the case.

    This mystery is the first appearance of the recurring character of Harriet Vane, who is said to be modeled after Sayers herself. Indeed, the novel incorporates many aspects of own life—including her famously rocky affair with a proponent of free love, John Cournos.

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  • Evelyn Waugh returns in this, his second novel, to deliver another scathing, comic satire of high society. This time his targets are the “bright young things” of post-World-War-I England. Waugh deftly skewers their raunchy, raucus, Jazz-age lifestyle, as well as the middle class public, who can’t seem to get enough of their gossip.

    As a testament to the novel’s staying power, David Bowie used Vile Bodies as the primary inspiration for his song “Aladdin Sane.”

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  • Years of Grace follows the life of Jane Ward, a rather unsophisticated young girl who comes of age in 1890s Chicago. Her family is upper middle class, and Jane finds her traditional, homebody nature being pulled by the various forces of ambition, culture, and progress that swirl around her during the effervescent decades at the turn of the century. We see her into late middle age, where the world has been ripped apart by war, and with change accelerating faster and faster as another war looms on the horizon.

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  • Miss Mole is a middle-age housekeeper who has recently left the employ of a wealthy matron to work for the young family of a minister. The mother has recently passed, leaving the family struggling to manage the household—but luckily for them, Miss Mole is exactly the kind of capable, witty, and assertive leader they need.

    As they work on ordering the household, a shadowy figure from Miss Mole’s past weaves in and out of the narrative. But whatever happened in Miss Mole’s history can’t seem to put a damper on her bright, clever, and funny outlook.

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  • The Faraway Bride concerns the Malinin family, shopowners in 1920s Manchuria who are struck by misfortune when their store is raided by Red Army thugs. Their father recalls that a friend owes him a debt of money that could save the family’s finances—but the friend lives in Seoul, which lies at a grueling three week’s walk across the Korean mountains. The difficulty of the journey doesn’t faze the two Malinin children, who excitedly embark on a quest to save the family.

    The novel is based on the story of Tobit from the Apocrypha, but its setting, and the resulting mish-mash of languages and cultures, make for a decidedly unique read.

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  • How will humankind, and the world, end? Geoffrey Dennis aims to answer that question in this singular work of semi-fiction. He explores how prophecies and predictions can twist the fate of humankind, and how the progress of science and technology can simultaneously lift humans up, while making them susceptible to control by societal and political interests. Dennis’s conclusions blend religion, science, and history to create a unique book that straddles the line between fact and fiction.

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  • Arthur Ransome, a journalist in Manchester, was inspired to write this children’s story of gentle adventure while spending a summer teaching a friend’s children to sail in the Lake District.

    In it, the children of two families on rural vacations meet in the wilderness; one side sails the dinghy named the Swallow, and the other the dinghy Amazon. They soon join forces against the dastardly “Captain Flint,” who in reality is just a cranky old man trying to quietly write his memoirs in his houseboat. Their adventures are a charming tale that, by staying firmly grounded in reality, completely eschews the tropes typical of today’s children’s books.

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  • T. S. Eliot wrote “Ash Wednesday” during his conversion to Anglicanism. It explores themes of searching for the divine. His previous poetry, like “The Waste Land,” suggests that meaning could only be found in high art; in this poem, the speaker, weary of the search for meaning in the secular world, turns to God. Like most of Eliot’s poetry, “Ash Wednesday” is in a modernist style dense with allusion.

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  • Daphne du Maurier had a long and illustrious career writing short fiction. This year, four of her short stories enter the U.S. public domain: “The Lover,” “The Supreme Artist,” “Frustration,” and “Indiscretion.” In her time, Du Maurier was often categorized as a romantic novelist, a label that frustrated her to no end, because her stories have more in common with the works of writers like Wilkie Collins in that they explore dark and sinister themes, often tinged with a paranormal flavor. Many of her works have since been adapted to film.

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  • Cimarron was the best-selling novel of 1930. Set in the lands of Oklahoma during the land rushes of 1889 and 1893, it follows a young family trying to make a life for themselves in a land beset by scrabbling settlers and outraged natives. The family’s trajectory rises as the charismatic patriarch founds a newspaper and settles local disputes, while the matriarch transforms from a faint-hearted Southern belle into a hard-eyed frontierswoman and politician.

    Though later seen as a paean to feminism, Ferber originally intended the story to be a satire of American womanhood. Its popularity led it to being published as an Armed Services Edition and sent to soldiers on the front—the same fortuitous fate that graced The Great Gatsby—cementing its fame in the minds of a generation.

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  • Giant’s Bread is the first novel Agatha Christie wrote under a pen name, because it differed so much from her usual mystery fare that she wanted it to stand up to public scrutiny under its own merits and not on her reputation. And stand up it did, as reviewers received it with glowing praise.

    The book follows Vernon Deyre, a young Englishman and brilliant musician, from infancy to adulthood before and during the Great War. It explores themes of love, sacrifice, art, and ultimately, redemption.

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  • The Secret of the Old Clock is the first Nancy Drew novel—the bestseller that started a series spanning nearly a century. In it, Nancy is enlisted by the Turners, a family struggling to locate the missing will of a wealthy, recently-deceased relative. Though this book was published in 1930, it was rewritten in 1959 by Harriet Adams. This Standard Ebooks edition is the original 1930 text.

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  • In The Hidden Staircase, Nancy Drew is called upon to solve another mystery. This time, two elderly sisters are experiencing hauntings in their mansion, and they need Nancy’s help to figure out what’s going on.

    Like the other Nancy Drew novels of the era, this one was heavily revised in 1959. The Standard Ebooks edition follows the original 1930 text.

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  • Nancy Drew is rowing with a friend when their boat capsizes in a storm. Their rescuer is Laura, a young woman about to enter into a large inheritance—and her new guardian is dead set on stealing it.

    This is the last of the first three so-called “breeder” Nancy Drew stories, published to pilot the commercial viability of the series. It was heavily revised in 1960, but this Standard Ebooks edition follows the 1930 text.

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  • Nancy Drew, young detective, is on the case again when her friend’s inheritance of diamonds, worth forty thousand dollars, is stolen during a lunch. Her friend’s guardian is the prime suspect. Can Nancy uncover the true criminal before an innocent person is locked away?

    Like many other Nancy Drew novels, this one was rewritten in 1961 by a different author. This Standard Ebooks edition follows the 1930 text, written by Mildred Wirt Benson under the Carolyn Keene pen name.

    Download and read for free →

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