
Yes. As others have said, linking to the bibrec file is the best solution for many situations out there. A few months ago, I spent many hours searching and cross-referencing to add links to PG titles in the English language Wikipedia. This seems to me like a perfect fit, as the ideal addition to an encyclopedia-type article is a link to where you can find more in-depth information on the topic. With the broadening of topics in PG (greatly thanks to DP) appropriate, relevent links can be added to Wikipedia not just for the obvious articles about famous books, but also biographies and auto-biographies, and books about famous events (such as the sinking of the Titanic.) I would argue that including links these not only raises the public profile of PG, but also shows people that PG does have books about the very topics they are interested in, not just a few old, musty classics. On Sat, 11 Sep 2004, Carlo Traverso wrote:
I see from PG pages (FAQ #0):
The mission of Project Gutenberg is simple:
"To encourage the creation and distribution of eBooks."
This mission is, as much as possible, to encourage *ALL* those who are interested in making eBooks and helping to give them away.
A link to a book is an help to give it away.