AnonStoleMyPants,

I have two apps for borrowing books, one for Finnish and one for English books (Ellibs and Libby). Weirdly the Finnish one sucks balls and literally has like 100 fantasy books in total. I don't read a ton but I do take a gander at stuff to borrow on occasion. I can sync the borrowed books with my Kobo e-reader which is nice. Then I also use the Kobo store to buy books, but my god their app is terrible. Bad enough that I groan when I need to browse books in there. I don't really read physical books but it has been tempting to start browsing libraries as I have two within walking distance. Perhaps during summer.

Haven't really found a good place to find new books. It is mostly though reddit. I know people use Goodreads but eh, for some reason it does not appeal to me that much.

ptman,

There's https://bookwyrm.social/ for fediverse goodreads alternative. For Finnish e-books, try https://ekirjasto.kirjastot.fi/ . It redirects to overdrive/ellibs in the end. In a year or two all of Finland should be served by one huge e-library instead of every library having their own e-library. Let's hope that improves the situation.

AnonStoleMyPants,

Thanks I might take a look at bookwyrm.

Then let's hope the book situation gets better soon!

ArmoredGoat,

I buy and read used physical books, when possible. To discover new books I frequently visit open bookshelves in my area, look into book subreddit/communities, look up similar books to those I already read, or go through the assortment of sellers when I buy used books (mainly to save shipping costs...).

alex,

I love physical books and rely mostly on my local library, on donation boxes, and sometimes on my local bookshop.

I also love ebooks, so if I'm not 100% sure I'll enjoy a book I usually get it on libgen, and then if I've liked it enough that I want to (literally) showcase it and pass it around to my friends, I go to my local bookshop and get the paper version.

DJDarren,

I'm pretty much 100% Kobo for my reading these days, and am not averse to buying things when they're on offer on Amazon then stripping off the DRM. I've had my library account attached to it in the past, but moved recently, so need to re-register with my local library.

Kamirose,

I read everything via the library first, unless it’s an author that I am absolutely positive that I will enjoy everything they write. I’ll borrow ebooks or physical books, depending on which will be available faster. Then, if I absolutely love the book and I’m sure I will read it again, I’ll buy a physical copy for my shelf.

bblfrnz,

I'm a pirate, I download almost everything that I'm going to read. Honestly, I don't even remember when was the last last time when I bought a book.

DmMacniel,

I have a Kindle for reading ebooks (no subscription though) but I buy comics/BDs physically as it feels nice having them on my Shelf and in my Hands while reading them.

courts,

I buy books as epubs and read them on my Tolino Epos. Buying is a no-brainer for me because if you think about it, the hours of entertainment / price ratio is insanely good with books. Paying between 5-15€ for a book here in Germany is less than I pay for a good meal.

Theorize3806,

I love physical books, but I always read on my Kindle that I buy straight off from the Kindle store. I'm trying to minimize my physical possessions, and reading ebooks has been a great way to do that.

gingerrich,

Buy them in store or online at Waterstones and I also use world of books for stuff out of print.

I've tried ebooks using a kindle and other pads. I cannot get used to it so I stick to physical books.

Schedar,

Bit of a mix really. I’ll mostly buy them on kindle but I’ve been a bit more mindful of money and just supporting libraries recently so I’ll check to see if it’s available in the local library first.

If it’s a special / meaningful book I’ll buy a physical copy (preferably a signed one!) but I try to keep this limited just due to space! Can get a lot more books on my kindle than I can on the book shelf

I’ve also been into audiobooks recently - as it’s much easier to listen to a book during those late night toddler wakes than it is to read (plus good when I have to drive any long distances) - for audio books I quite like audible (preferably when it supports whisper sync so I can switch between reading on my kindle and listening). I probably need to check to see if my library can provide audio books too!

madjo,
madjo avatar

My library is huge, I don't have enough shelf space for all of my physical books, and on my ebook reader, I have a big kindle, humble bundle and bookfunnel library. I also have an offline ebook library.
I probably don't have enough time in my life to read all the books I want to read.

So I'm now pretty picky on what books I'm going to buy, rent, 'steal' or borrow.

mycus,
mycus avatar

libgen, anna's archive, scihub if I'm feeling academicky. So I guess renting eh?

used to have a kindle pw2 but nowadays I just read stuff through koreader or mupdf on a smartphone

Engywuck,

I pirate shamelessly. Z-lib is my to-go.

neamhsplach,

Never heard of this! Thank you!!

eduardm,

It feels so good to finally say this outright. Arrr!

PanaX,

I just realized, boy is it refreshing to actually talk about sites like z-lib without being censored. Library Genesis and Anna's Archive are also nifty.

jiji,

I didn’t know about Anna’s Archive, thank you. :)

alyaza,
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

yeah if i'm even remotely ambiguous on whether i'd want a book, piracy. i can't buy everything and i can't go to a library every day. but i definitely try to buy books from the authors i know i like—i heard great things about NK Jemisin and Kim Stanley Robinson for example, read one of their books, and then that made me go out and buy large parts of both's output. i think i have physical copies of like a third of KSR's major novels, lol.

PanaX,

Exactly. I always read a pirated epub first, then, I always go out and buy that book in hardcover. But many of the authors I enjoy are long dead, and many of their prints are in public domain. So piracy doesn't matter there. That's where Project Gutenberg and Standard Ebooks are incredible!

ellabella,

Book Depository closed the other month, I don't know if Amazon understood how important it is for people outside US and EU, but the closure really pushed everyone I know to casually switch back to piracy.

Los,
@Los@beehaw.org avatar

What? The website looks the same to me?

ellabella,
fishy_2_0,

i rarely buy physical books as i like reading during breaks or when im waiting on something and its not always feasible to have a book with me i buy books when they are available for a price that will not bankrupt me as a book thats 10 dollars is around 50 ron wich in my opinion is far too much especially as i need money for other things otherwise i simply pirate them

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