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Resources for advanced Esperanto speakers include:
  • La Nova Plena Ilustrita Vortaro de Esperanto, 2005, the most extensive, authoritative Esperanto-only dictionary, available only in printed form.
  • Plena Manlibro de Esperanto-Gramatiko by Bertilow Wennergren, on the grammar of Esperanto (available in either printed form or on the Internet)
  • Reta Vortaro, an on-line multilanguage dictionary.

Once you have learned Esperanto and can read it fluently, there are many hundreds of books and many thousands of web sites available for you to read.
Some free eBooks in Esperanto are available from Project Gutenburg and from Bretaro.net.
UEA has the most wide-ranging book service (http://katalogo.uea.org/). Books, disks etc can be ordered directly from UEA.
The current affairs magazine Monato currently has 100 contributors in 45 countries around the world.
Flandra Esperanto-Ligo has an excellent bookshop online at Retbutiko.

New Zealanders who want to order magazines can contact our NZ agent David Dewar at:
gddewar <at> ihug.co.nz.

Esperantists can be found on many social networking sites, e.g. Ipernity.

For those who want to contribute to the progress of Esperanto there are many avenues open. You can write articles for various Esperanto magazines and on-line projects: e.g.
Further sites are listed on Esperanto.net.
There are many opportunities in Open Source Software, translating user interfaces into Esperanto, e.g.