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2026 Public Domain Introductions

January 09, 2026 | 2 min read

A new year means a whole new crop of work is entering the public domain. And that means endless opportunities for retellings, spoofs, adaptations, and fan fiction.

When Does a Work Enter the Public Domain?

In the U.S., a creative work enters the public domain based on a set of rules dictated by when it was originally created, who created it, and when it was published. That's a fancy way of saying "it's complicated."

For creative works (books, films, music scores) created on or after January 1, 1978, the general rule is that copyright lasts for the life of the author plus seventy years. Most works published in the U.S. before 1978 enter the public domain 95 years after their first authorized publication date, effectively on January 1st of the 96th year. (Of course, it's way more complicated than that, but that's a good overview of the general rule.)

Under current law, each January 1, another year’s worth of works enters the public domain. On January 1, 2026, works published in 1930 became free of copyright.

Additions to the Public Domain in 2026

Here are some of the works that the Freewrite team is most excited to see enter the public domain:

Books

  1. William Faulkner,Β As I Lay Dying
  2. Dashiell Hammett,Β The Maltese FalconΒ (the full book version)
  3. Agatha Christie,Β The Murder at the VicarageΒ (the first novel featuring Miss Marple)
  4. Carolyn Keene (pseudonym for Mildred Benson), the first fourΒ Nancy DrewΒ books, beginning withΒ The Secret of the Old Clock
  5. Watty Piper (pen name of Arnold Munk),Β The Little Engine That CouldΒ (the popular illustrated version, with drawings by Lois Lenski)
  6. T.S. Eliot,Β Ash Wednesday
  7. Edna Ferber,Β Cimarron
  8. Sigmund Freud,Β Civilization and Its DiscontentsΒ (in the original German,Β Das Unbehagen in der Kultur)
  9. W. Somerset Maugham,Β Cakes and Ale
  10. Bertrand Russell,Β The Conquest of Happiness

Characters & Comics

  1. Betty BoopΒ from Fleischer Studios'Β Dizzy DishesΒ and other cartoons
  2. RoverΒ (later renamedΒ Pluto) from Disney'sΒ The Chain GangΒ (as an unnamed bloodhound) andΒ The PicnicΒ (as Rover)
  3. BlondieΒ andΒ DagwoodΒ from theΒ BlondieΒ comic strips by Chic Young
  4. Nine newΒ Mickey Mouse cartoons, the initial week ofΒ Mickey Mouse comic strips, and ten newΒ Silly SymphoniesΒ cartoons from Disney

Movies

  1. All Quiet on the Western Front, directed by Lewis Milestone (winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture)
  2. King f Jazz, directed by John Murray Anderson (musical revue featuring Paul Whiteman and Bing Crosby’s first feature-film appearance)
  3. Cimarron, directed by Wesley Ruggles (winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture, registered for copyright in 1930)
  4. The Blue Angel (Der blaue Engel), directed by Josef von Sternberg (starring Marlene Dietrich)
  5. Hell's Angels, directed by Howard Hughes (Jean Harlow’s film debut)
  6. The Big Trail, directed by Raoul Walsh (John Wayne’s first leading role)
  7. Murder!, directed by Alfred Hitchcock
  8. L'Γ‚ge d'Or, directed by Luis BuΓ±uel, written by BuΓ±uel and Salvador DalΓ­
  9. Free and Easy, directed by Edward Sedgwick (Buster Keaton’s first speaking role)

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April 01, 2026 0 min read
March 22, 2026 3 min read

If you're new here, freewriting is β€œan unfiltered and non-stop writing practice.” It’s sometimes known as stream-of-consciousness writing.

To do it, you simply need to write continuously, without pausing to rephrase, self-edit, or spellcheck. Freewriting is letting your words flow in their raw, natural state.

When writing the first draft of a novel, freewriting is the approach we, and many authors, recommend because it frees you from many of the stumbling blocks writers face.

This method helps you get to a state of feeling focused and uninhibited, so you can power through to the finish line.

How Freewriting Gives You Mental Clarity

Freewriting is like thinking with your hands. Some writers have described it as "telling yourself the story for the first time."

Writing for Inside Higher Ed, Steven Mintz says, β€œWriting is not simply a matter of expressing pre-existing thoughts clearly. It’s the process through which ideas are produced and refined.” And that’s the magic of putting pen to paper, or fingertips to keyboard. The way you learned to ride a bike by wobbling until suddenly you were pedaling? The way you learned certain skills by doing as well as revising? It works for writing, too.

The act of writing turns on your creative brain and kicks it into high gear. You’re finally able to articulate that complex idea the way you want to express it when you write, not when you stare at a blank page and inwardly think until the mythical perfect sentence comes to mind.

Writing isn’t just the way we express ideas, but it’s how we extract them in the first place. WritingΒ is thinking.

Or, as Flannery O'Connor put it:

β€œI write because I don't know what I think until I read what I say.”

Writing isn’t just the way we express ideas, but it’s how we extract them in the first place. WritingΒ is thinking.

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Freewriting to Freethinking

But how and why does it work? Freewriting makes fresh ideas tumble onto the page because this type of writing helps you get into a meditative flow state, where the distractions of the world around you slip away.

Julie Cameron, acclaimed author ofΒ The Artist’s Way, proposed the idea that flow-state creativity comes from a divine source. And sure, it certainly feels like wizardry when the words come pouring out and scenes seem to arrange themselves on the page fully formed. But that magic, in-the-zone writing feeling doesn’t have to happen only once in a blue moon. It’s time to bust that myth.

By practicing regular freewriting and getting your mind (and hands) used to writing unfiltered, uncensored, and uninterrupted, you start freethinking and letting the words flow. And the science backs it up.

According to Psychology Today, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex goes quiet during flow state. This part of the brain is in charge of β€œself-monitoring and impulse control” – in other words, the DLPFC is the tiny home of your loud inner critic.Β And while that mean little voice in your head takes a long-overdue nap, you’re free to write without doubt orΒ negative self-talk.

β€œWith this area [of the brain] deactivated, we’re far less critical and far more courageous, both augmenting our ability to imagine new possibilities and share those possibilities with the world.”

Freewriting helps us connect with ourselves and our own thoughts, stories, beliefs, fears, and desires. But working your creative brain is like working a muscle. It needs regular flexing to stay strong.

So, if freewriting helps us think and organize our thoughts and ideas, what happens if we stop writing? If we only consume and hardly ever create, do we lose the ability to think for ourselves? Up next, read "Are We Living through a Creativity Crisis?"

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Learn More About Freewriting

Get the ultimate guide to boosting creativity and productivity with freewriting absolutelyΒ free right here.You'll learn how to overcome perfectionism, enhance flow, and reignite the joy of writing.

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March 16, 2026 2 min read

Picturethis. Imaginetryingtoreadapagethatlookedlikethis,withnospacestoseparateonewordfromthenext.Β No pauses. No breath. Just an endless procession of letters that your brain must laboriously slice into meaning, one syllable at a time.