My thanks to Clay Shannon for the suggestion that LibriVox audiobooks can be loaded onto iPhones by downloading them to one's PC, then emailing them to the iPhone. That particular suggestion didn't work for me because the audio files are far too large to email. However, in the course of trying to figure how to get the files on my phone, I hit on a solution: I installed LibriVox's app (for $2.99) onto my phone, then used it to download several audiobooks. These files aren't in the same folder as my Audible.com books, but as the LibriVox application works much like Audible, that is a minor inconvenience. Now that I know a practical way to listen to these books on my phone--something I do almost every time I drive my car, ride my bike, work out at a gym, or do quiet yardwork --I'll repeat the suggestion I made in my first posting on this subject. Thanks to the generous volunteer work of people like fellow forum member John Greenman, literally thousands of full-length recordings of public domain books are freely available on LibriVox.org. As I said before, many of the recordings are painfully amateurish, but others--such as those of Greenman--have a professional polish that makes listening to them pleasurable. If you've never listened to an audiobook, I strongly recommend you give one a try, and I further recommend starting with a book with which you are already familiar, as listening to a book attentively takes some practice. I know some people scorn audiobooks as poor substitutes for reading from printed books. I think of audiobook listening not as a substitute, but as a supplement to reading. I've read HUCKLEBERRY FINN in print many times and have also listened to recordings of it an additional ten times. All this listening has naturally helped familiarize me with the book, but it has also done something else: Every time I listen HUCK FINN I get something out of it that I don't recall noticing before. If there is a downside to listening to well-narrated audiobooks, I can't imagine what it is. Moreover, the nearly 1,000 books I've listened to over past 25 years have spared me thousands of hours of tedium when reading a printed book would have been impossible.