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					<title>A Better Bookshop</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[matt]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Oct 2025 01:45:32 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.bagaag.com/?p=678</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[I just finished Intermezzo, by Sally Roony — read my thoughts over at Books. This was the second book I read with Libby, the Kindle alternative that serves up e‑books from your local library. A dear friend and former librarian tried to turn me onto Libby years ago, but my library card had lapsed and [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>I just finished <em>Intermezzo</em>, by Sally Roony — read my thoughts over at <a href="https://www.bagaag.com/books/" data-type="page" data-id="195">Books</a>. This was the second book I read with Libby, the Kindle alternative that serves up e‑books from your local library. A dear friend and former librarian tried to turn me onto Libby years ago, but my library card had lapsed and I was too lazy to deal with it. For decades, I have purchased and read books using Kindle on my phone. But as Amazon becomes more and more of a monopoly, and as its CEO Jeff Bezos increasingly cozies up to a lawless authoritarian regime, I finally renewed my library card.</p>



<span id="more-678"></span>



<p>My Amazon exit strategy for books started with <a href="https://kobo.com/">Kobo</a>, a Canadian e‑book retailer with associated hardware and mobile app that gives Amazon some much-needed competition. I liked Kobo and read a few books on it, but the relationship soured when I tried to read on an airplane and found that Kobo would not let me read without an Internet connection. Not even Kindle does that.</p>



<p>It was then that I suffered through renewing my expired library card (it took me all of 15 minutes) and gave <a href="https://libbyapp.com/">Libby</a> a chance. The mobile app is a pleasure to use, it works offline and best of all, the books are free. Libby is definitely my first stop for books going forward.</p>



<p>There’s just one problem: I’m a very slow reader. Not only do I actually read slow — sounding out the words in my head as I read them — I also seldom read for more than an hour a day. For <em>Intermezzo</em>, I scrambled to finish the book before the end of my first renewal period. This book wasn’t in high demand, so I could have renewed a second time. But I was close, so I powered through. A silver lining of library lending periods is motivation to actually finish a book within a reasonable amount of time. However, the next book I wanted to read, actually the next 3 books, all have a wait list.</p>



<p>Libraries only own so many copies of each e‑book, and can only lend out the number they own at any one time. This means popular books — especially new ones — often have a wait list. This isn’t so terrible, except that books with a wait list cannot be renewed. My library lends e‑books for 2 weeks, but it usually takes me at least a month or two to finish a book. Without a wait list, I can renew a book twice for a total of 6 weeks, which should generally be doable. But if I borrow a wait-listed book, I’ll only have 2 weeks to read it unless I’m the last person on the wait-list and nobody else requests it while I’m reading.</p>



<p>This caused me to search for a backup I could turn to for books that are in high demand. That led me to <a href="https://bookshop.org/">Bookshop.org</a>. Like Kobo, Bookshop.org sells e‑books at very reasonable prices and has a capable mobile app for reading. Unlike Kobo, the mobile app works without an Internet connection once the book is downloaded. The icing on the cake is that Bookshop.org is a Benefit Corporation, giving <a href="https://bookshop.org/info/about-us">80% of its profit</a> directly to brick-and-mortar book stores.</p>



<p>So it’s Libby for me going forward if the book isn’t wait-listed at my library and if I think I can get through it in under 6 weeks. Otherwise it’s Bookshop.org. I just purchased <em><a href="https://bookshop.org/p/books/never-let-me-go-kazuo-ishiguro/48790021311d89fc?ean=9781400044832&amp;digital=t">Never Let Me Go</a></em> by Kazuo Ishiguro for $2.99. Definitely worth three bucks to not feel pressured to finish the book in 2 weeks.</p>



<p>So do the book industry a favor and give Amazon’s competition some love. And do us all a favor by supporting local libraries and bookstores.</p>
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