Hello, fellow bibliophiles!
I’ve been on the hunt for a decent Goodreads alternative for a few years now and was curious as to what the fine folks of the Lemmyverse thought of Bookwyrm.
There are so many GR alternatives that are clearly trying to be “The New Goodreads”, though the whole reason I wanted an alternative is because I’m sick of GR and its devolution into a commercialized, biased, and messy shithole. Like, if I wanted recommendations and feckless reviews straight from the putrid inner bowels of Tiktok, I’d go to Tiktok. And most of these alternatives seem to quickly turn into the same thing. I refuse to believe that GR and its copycats are our only viable option.
Bookwyrm seems promising. It’s been a bit clunky and I’m still figuring it out, but I’m enjoying the utter lack of sponsored or “pushed” content. So, thoughts? Opinions? Suggestions?
Glaive0 ( @Glaive0@beehaw.org ) 19•2 years agoI use storygraph, though don’t care to do anything more than track reads, set goals, and share with my wife who uses that and gr.
It’s nice though! and let’s me split content by the exact edition/format pretty easily.
Fluffysquash ( @Fluffysquash@lemmy.ml ) 4•2 years agoThe developer also seems like a super person. She had a great interview about building storygraph on the remote ruby podcast
OceanSoap ( @OceanSoap@lemmy.ml ) 3•2 years agoI have storygraph also. It’s clean and crisp and so great for tracking my reads. I hope more people hop over to it.
I love storygraph but its UI could be better, especially the reviews section.
Glaive0 ( @Glaive0@beehaw.org ) 2•2 years agoYeah, there’s a lot of times where I’m trying to figure out how to get where I want for way too long. I don’t know if I don’t use reviews because I don’t care or if it’s bad, but it’s likely the former as I don’t go to any of these apps for recommendations. I do like their granularity as that can be helpful from time to time!
Kaypher ( @Kaypher@lemm.ee ) 1•2 years agoAnother here for StoryGraph. Very clean UI, simple tracking and sorting. Recommendations seems helpful too.
OceanSoap ( @OceanSoap@lemmy.basedcount.com ) 1•2 years agoI second story graph. I really like the app, it’s so user friendly. I wish more people would switch over to it.
I really wanted to like Storygraph, but it constantly crashed on me. :(
ghost_laptop ( @gary_host_laptop@lemmy.ml ) 4•2 years agoBW is super nice but it really needs more development, it’s clear it needs some database thingy improvement, but well, given how little known it is, it’s understandable.
Andere ( @Andere@lemmy.ml ) English3•2 years agoI wasn’t a goodreads user previously because of Amazon’s ownership but I’m happy with BookWyrm so far.
Fuck Work ( @0x520@slrpnk.net ) 3•2 years agoI love bookwyrm. Great for tracking, reviews and though it has no recommendation engine, I get tons of reccomendations from it.
I’m enjoying the lack of bullshit and bells and whistles. Sometimes it’s a tiny bit buggy, like randomly logging me out or crashing while loading a book, little things like that, but I’m liking it enough to give it a proper chance.
Michal ( @Michal@discuss.tchncs.de ) 3•2 years agoI am on GR but don’t rely on it much, just to keep track of read books, and a wishlist.
I used it to pick the best rated Daniel Silva book and was disappointed as o didn’t like it. I’d agree that reviews on GR ale not reliable, most people have different taste. What’s most annoying is how most reviews there start by summarizing the book which inflates the bloat you have to go through before you get to the review.
I only just checked out bookwyrm now, but i can’t find the book I’m currently reading there (the poet by Michael Connelly). It doesn’t look like it has as much content.
So true about the long-winded reviews nowadays. I feel like they’re one of three templates lately: grade school book report ; “omg yas best book ever” with descriptive gifs ; or pure vitriol. I miss when GR reviews were actually helpful.
As for Bookwyrm, that was one of the main reasons I made this post, because it didn’t seem like there were many users, but the app itself is slowly growing on me.
morrowind ( @morrowind@lemmy.ml ) 2•2 years agoAnother interesting platform in development is Hardcover. The devs have said they’re open to integrating with the fediverse in the future.
Seeker of Carcosa ( @WilloftheWest@feddit.uk ) 2•2 years agoI use Bookwyrm and it works for what I need: track reading, rate books, view reading lists of people who have read the same books. My partner uses StoryGraph which does seem a lot cleaner and more polished, but I haven’t felt the need to switch yet.
Daniel ( @daniel@lemmy.ca ) 2•2 years agoLiteral.club is probably my favourite. Cleanest interface of anything I’ve tried, and a really great API to use if you’re a developer. It also recommends profiles with a similar taste to yours, which can be helpful for discovering new books.
Edit: I looked into Bookwyrm and it turns out you can get book lists (e.g. currently reading) as JSON. For example, bookwyrm.social/user/mouse/books/reading.json. For anyone who wants an API, this might be enough.
ghost_laptop ( @gary_host_laptop@lemmy.ml ) 1•2 years agoIt’s closed source, though.
Daniel ( @daniel@lemmy.ca ) 1•2 years agoUnfortunately :(
Lewistrick ( @Lewistrick@feddit.nl ) 2•2 years agoI’m finding Goodreads very clunky as well. Is Bookworm a lot worse?
I think it’s still in need of some development, but it does the job well. And I love the lack of useless bells and whistles.
Lewistrick ( @Lewistrick@feddit.nl ) 1•2 years agoOoh I see that I can do a Goodreads import! I’m sold immediately!
anar ( @anarchist@lemmy.ml ) 1•2 years agoOpen Library - open source, mainainted by your friends from archive.org