About Diegun
A cinematic reading room for public-domain literature.
Diegun is a public-domain reading library — 50 curated classics with verified covers, chapter-by-chapter HTML reading, and editorial framing worthy of a serious publication.
Reading deserves a quieter internet
Most “free ebook” sites optimize for ads, download buttons, and scraped PDF dumps. They treat books as files to be harvested, not conversations to be entered. Diegun is built on a different premise: literature should feel curated, legible, and legally clear.
We publish public-domain texts as discrete chapter pages — fast to load, easy to index, comfortable on phones, and honest about sourcing. Around those texts we write original editorial notes, themed collections, and careful metadata so you can choose the right book for this season of your life.
Our reading philosophy
We favor atmosphere over volume. Each title in the library passed cover validation and text review before publication. We split books into chapters because long single-page dumps punish mobile readers and search engines alike. We link outward to Project Gutenberg and reference sources because transparency builds trust.
We are a reading publication, not a piracy funnel. When you finish a chapter on Diegun, you have read literature — you have not merely downloaded a file.
Cinematic design direction
Visually, Diegun borrows from premium editorial sites: restrained typography, bronze-and-obsidian atmosphere, generous line-height on reading pages, and a homepage paced like a literary magazine rather than a warehouse. The design should disappear while you read — leaving only the text and the mood.
Public-domain mission
Public-domain literature is a shared inheritance. Our mission is to present that inheritance with craft: validated covers, clean HTML, strong internal linking, and policies that make the legal status of every title clear. We expand the library deliberately — quality before quantity.
Literary curation
Our catalog is organized for discovery, not exhaustiveness. Shelves such as Gothic Classics, Atmospheric Mystery, and Sci‑Fi Classics group titles by mood and tradition — the way a well-run bookstore table might, not the way a spreadsheet sorts ISBNs. Category pages and author hubs reinforce context so you can wander from Poe to Stevenson without leaving the atmosphere.
Every book page includes editorial notes, takeaways, and honest links to external references. We write those materials ourselves; they are not syndicated from retailers or scraped from Wikipedia.
Trust and transparency
We publish detailed legal pages, a clear disclaimer, and policies that explain how we handle data and cookies. That transparency is part of the product: you should know what you are reading, where it came from, and how the site sustains itself. Advertising, when enabled, appears in standard placements and does not alter chapter text.
How to reach us
Corrections, sourcing questions, and thoughtful notes are welcome at editorial@diegun.com. We read editorial mail regularly.