Sad Cypress by Agatha Christie πŸ“–

LINK.  https://kingauthor.net/books/Agatha%20Christie/Sad%20Cypress/Sad%20Cypress%20-%20Agatha%20Christie.pdf (PDF, incomplete)
https://read-free-online.blogspot.com/p/working-on-sad-cypress-hercule-poirot-22.html (takes you to mine bc honestly there aren't any well-formatted sites I could find so you could use mine or just google "sad cypress read free online" and read it on studynovels or vampirenovels100 or smth lolol)

Extra resources to use while reading!

Breakdown of Sad Cypress: http://www.self.gutenberg.org/articles/sad_cypress (scroll down to read about the characters, plot summary, and literary significance. It's super fascinating!)

Notes on Sad Cypress: https://knowingchristie.wordpress.com/2013/02/25/notes-on-sad-cypress/ (a bit hard to follow what they're talking about, but still interesting)

Under the Greenwood Tree by Thomas Hardy πŸ“–

 LINK.  https://www.gutenberg.org/files/2662/2662-h/2662-h.htm

SPOILERIFIC THREAD: Return of the Thief & the Queen’s Thief Series

For those of you left unsatisfied and a bit wanting after finishing the sixth and final, Return of the Thief, I've got the thread for you. They cover everything from this book as well as tying in previous books, and they dive deeply into the book, dissect it really well, and break down the confusing stuff. Most of the questions I was left with after reading the last page were answered in this thread, so read it if you feel like you need answers or closure.

LINK.  https://dearauthor.com/book-reviews/spoilerific-therad-return-of-the-thief-the-queens-thief-series-by-megan-whalen-turner/

Standard Ebooks πŸ“š

They have an extensive library, a whole plethora of free books, a bunch of classics, as well as lots of more obscure writings. All of these are out of copyright, so it's a completely legal way to read some older books. They have a newsletter you can subscribe to, and you can suggest books that aren't on the website (but are out of copyright), and there are lots of ways to get involved and help them out more than just reading the books they put on the website for you. Choice is yours. Either way, enjoy.

LINK.  https://standardebooks.org/

Puck of Pook's Hill by Rudyard Kipling πŸ“–

 LINK.  https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~rgs/puck-table.html

The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling πŸ“–

 LINK.  https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~rgs/jngl-table.html

Anne of Green Gables (first four books) by L.M. Montgomery πŸ“š

 LINK.  https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~rgs/anne-table.html

RGS website πŸ“š

Someone compiled some books in one website, mostly from Project Gutenberg, but you might like his format better than Project Gutenberg so I'm linking it.

LINK.  https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~rgs/literature.html

websites that have The Scarlet Pimpernel series online for free πŸ“š

 I always send people to blakeneymanor.com to read the Scarlet Pimpernel series, but there are other websites out there that not only have the TSP series but others as well and if you don't like the layout of blakeneymanor (I'm really picky about the layout I read in fsr. I don't care when it's a physical copy but it has to be one I like when I read on the computer because otherwise I have a hard time focusing on what I'm reading. Don't ask me why), here are some alternate options