The best apps to find new books

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

Books offer a compelling, slower alternative to the onslaught of negative news. With terrific new free tools, it’s increasingly easy to access print, digital, and audio books. Read on for my favorite book sites and apps.

The heavy-hitters

  • Libby lends out free e-books and audiobooks through libraries in 78 countries. It works for 90% of U.S. libraries. You can search for and check out nearly anything, instantly, for free, on any device.
    • Audiobooks: Check out and listen to audiobooks at any speed. You may not need to pay for an Audible subscription.
    • Definitions: Click on any word in an e-book you’re reading in Libby for its definition or to see where else that name or phrase appears.
    • Highlight: Save memorable passages for your notes.
    • Multiple cards: You can use multiple library cards within a single Libby account. That helps you check which library has the shortest waiting list for a book in high demand. (See where you can get non-resident library cards).
    • Limitation: Libby is digital-only—you can’t use it for physical books. That requires a separate app or site, like the NYPL app in New York.
  • Kanopy provides free access to top-notch feature films and documentaries. I log in with my library card. Watch on the Web, iOS or Android, or on a SmartTV app like Google TV, Roku, or Amazon Fire TV.
    • Limitation: libraries limit the number of videos you can watch monthly. 
  • Hoopla is an alternative to Libby that works with 3,900 library systems in the U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Like Libby it hosts audiobooks and e-books, but also bundles in comics, movies, TV shows, magazines, and music.
    • Use Hoopla to read, watch or listen from the Web or on a mobile device. I recently discovered its free Bingepasses, which allow instant access to a collection of magazines or videos for a week.
  • World Cat tells you which of 10,000 global libraries near you have a particular book. It works in multiple languages. Search for books in print, e-book, braille, audio, or other formats.

Find your next read

Find free and cheap books

Support Independent booksellers

  • Alibris has 200 million titles from indy booksellers around the world.
  • Powell’s is the world’s largest independent bookstore.
  • Bookfinder lets you search online to find any book at the cheapest price.
  • Indiebound helps you find a nearby real-world indy bookstore.
  • Abebooks has great deals from independents. Check its bargain books + collections. Caveat: Amazon has owned it since 2008.
  • Tertulia is a well-designed online co-op bookshop owned by readers.

Make your own book list

Find great children’s books

  • Sora is a digital library for kids. Schools make e-books and audiobooks available on the app. It works well with graphic novels, picture books, as well as comic books and textbooks. (We also use Libby for kids books).
  • Epic is another popular kids e-book app. It’s fun to use, but be aware that it leans into gamification and extrinsic motivation—using points and streaks to entice kids to repeatedly open the app.
  • Kanopy has a great kids section with video versions of books by Eric Carle, Mo Willems and other great authors to spark an interest in reading. It also has math and science lessons.

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91282698/the-best-apps-to-find-new-books?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Létrehozva 2mo | 2025. febr. 24. 6:20:05


Jelentkezéshez jelentkezzen be

EGYÉB POSTS Ebben a csoportban

Joe Rogan and Dave Portnoy are already distancing themselves from Trump’s agenda

Just a few months into Donald Trump’s second term, are the manosphere influencers who championed him already starting to backpedal?

In a

2025. ápr. 23. 5:30:06 | Fast company - tech
‘Perfect example of what a snipe should be’: The Dr Pepper guy is stream sniping IRL—and the internet can’t get enough

Stalking, but with a side of Dr Pepper?

A number of streamers in Japan have recently had run-ins with a mysterious stream sniper known only as the Dr Pepper Guy. As

2025. ápr. 22. 20:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Drone near misses hit record high at major airports. Here’s what to know

A commercial airliner was on final approach to San Francisco’s international airport in November when the crew spotted a drone outside the cockpit window. By then it was too late “to take evasive

2025. ápr. 22. 17:50:09 | Fast company - tech
Set your meetings free with these no-cost Zoom alternatives

While Zoom is unquestionably the biggest name in videoconferencing, its free tier has some limitations—particularly the 40-minute time cap on group meetings. The good news is that several excellen

2025. ápr. 22. 15:40:08 | Fast company - tech
Luxury yacht owners are throwing scientists a lifeline

Francesco Ferretti had a problem. His research expedition to track white sharks in the Mediterranean was suddenly adrift—the boat he’d arranged had vanished into the pandemic’s chaos o

2025. ápr. 22. 15:40:06 | Fast company - tech
Tesla investors want to know: when will Musk ditch the White House to boost car sales?

Tesla investors are anxious to know if plans to roll out a cheaper car and a ro

2025. ápr. 22. 15:40:05 | Fast company - tech