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There are many options when it comes to finding and getting braille books.<br>
<br>
For Free Braille books, go to <a href="http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/www.seedlings.org">Seedlings Braille Books for Children</a><br>
They offer 2 Free braille books per year through their Angel program.
Otherwise they offer very low cost braille books for your children.<br>
<br>
If you want to create your own braille or audio books, you can download
books from bookshare.org, where school children can sign up for free.
Bookshare offers thousands of books at your fingertips. You can download
Victor Reader Soft, from their site, which is free audio software. When
you download your books, you will download them in daisy format to be
played on Victor Reader Soft right from your computer. Sign up and get
your child registered. <br>
<br>
<a href="http://www.bookshare.org/">Bookshare</a> offers braille book downloads also. If you have braille software such as <a href="http://www.duxburysystems.com/">Duxbury Braille Translation software</a>
you can download books in the .brf format and have them open in
braille. Combine this with a braille display and your child can read the
book from their computer. If they are blessed with an adaptive laptop
such as a <a href="http://www.humanware.com/en-usa/products/blindness/braillenotes/_details/id_236/braillenote_apex_qt_32.html">Braille Note</a>
then the file can be saved to a thumb drive and loaded onto the Braille
Note, or the Braille Note can go online and download it directly from
Bookshare and can be read in the bookreader of the Braille Note.<br>
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<a href="http://www.nbp.org/ic/nbp/publications/downloads.html">National Braille Press</a> also offers books, some for purchase and others for free.<br>
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But never forget about your state book and braille library. This is a
free book loan program in your state for braille and audio books. For
more books than you can dream of, go to the largest braille library
source in the country: <a href="http://blindlibrary.utah.gov/">Utah State Library for the Blind and Disabled</a><br>
If you go there, they will have a host of other information and where to
go and get more braille books and materials. Your state library can
help you get books from this resource if you do not happen to live in
the loan area for books from them.<br>
<a href="http://www.loc.gov/nls/"><br>
Web Braille</a> is the National Library of Congress loaded with
thousands of braille books for download also. When you sign up for
services you will go to their download section of <a href="http://www.loc.gov/nls/braille">Braille Books</a>
which will require you to have a username and password. There you will
find a plethora and myriad of braille books at your fingers tips also.<br>
<br>
So here are a few options to get you going. For more information on <a href="http://www.yourtechvision.com/">educating your child based on experience and years of education</a>, visit yourtechvision.com and ask questions that you need answers too.
<div> </div><div><span style="FONT-FAMILY:'Brush Script MT';COLOR:black;FONT-SIZE:18pt;"><font color="#4040ff"> Denise </font></span></div><div><span style="FONT-FAMILY:'Brush Script MT';COLOR:black;FONT-SIZE:18pt;"></span> </div><div>Denise M. Robinson, TVI, Ph.D. <br>CEO, TechVision</div><div>Specialist in blind technology/teaching/training</div><div>email: <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="mailto:deniserob@gmail.com">yourtechvision@gmail.com</a><br>Website with hundreds of lessons: yourtechvision.com <br></div><div><a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/"><br></a></div><div> </div></div></body></html>