Tomorrow is it. The day Tor officially concludes their Free E-book Giveaway promotion and launches their new web site.
That means my own series where I dig into the books and their authors will also be concluding, though I have a few places where I need to go back and fill-in since I invariably skipped over an e-book or two along the way.
If you missed any of the downloads, see my series. I have links to the downloads (which will remain working as long as Tor doesn't remove the e-books from their download site). Or, visit Tor's site (after today, I'm guessing) as they're expected to make all of the downloads available one last time.
NOTE: As of 7/20/08, Tor has listed all the downloads (e-books and wallpapers) here. The list is supposed to remain up until July 27.
For more information about the launch, I'll mine some information from scifi.com:
[The new] Tor.com will feature original fiction, a group blog, lightweight social networking features and an extensive art gallery.
Patrick Nielson Hayden, senior editor and manager of science fiction, has this to say:
"On several occasions I have said--not entirely joking--to my own corporate masters that there will be times when you look at front page of the site, and you will see that it consists almost entirely of a half-dozen different bloggers having an extended and elaborate conversation about medieval siege engines, and that's fine," he said. "Because that's exactly the kind of geeky subject that tends to be of interest to people who are interested in science fiction and fantasy."
Also, the site will launch with an original story by John Scalzi called "After the Coup", set in his popular Old Man's War universe, and feature "Down on the Farm," a new story by Charles Stross, set in the same milieu as his novels The Atrocity Archives and The Jennifer Morgue.
So, more free stuff and some potentially good conversation about fantasy and science fiction. I'm looking forward to checking it out.