this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2023
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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?

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[โ€“] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

I empathise with your search for a better Goodreads. I used to be a "librarian" there, and the thought that I wasted my time on improving an Amazon service by adding books to their database makes me feel embarrassed. Worst of all, they actively harmed the database by using retarded bots to import garbage data (including DVDs and similar nonsense). When they realised they had imported too much garbage, they made a bot to delete some of it - but it deleted several books that I had added as well, perfectly fine data gone without any notification. Along with the shoddy redesign and long-time neglect and removal of some secondary functions, I got utterly sick of the site.

Everyone on Lemmy should give a chance to Bookwyrm. It's based on similar principles as Lemmy, decentralised and open source, a part of the Fediverse. The database is taken from the Open Library (a part of the Archive.org project). I tried it out one or two years ago, so it was my first interaction with the Fediverse in general. Sadly the database does not meet my needs, since I read a lot of obscure stuff in a few different languages. I'd have to go correct or add the data on Open Library for like every other book I've read. Way too much work, though it would be beneficial for other people too...

There are also Storygraph and LibraryThing. The latter seems closer to my tastes and needs, very old-school. But I never signed up, because I thought it's a paid service - indeed it used to be up until a few years ago, and now it's free.

So anyway I just switched to entering all the data in a LibreOffice spreadsheet (equivalent to MS Excel). One column for the title, one for the author name, etc. I'm apparently a picky reader/user, so it's probably the best solution.

[โ€“] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@antonim I felt much the same and gave up using any online cataloging system. I trust no one now. ๐Ÿ™„ @Fannybaws

[โ€“] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

You're right not to trust anyone. I stopped trusting GR when it started exclusively "recommending" books that were popular on Tiktok. It was a swift and merciless breakup.

[โ€“] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Dangit, I had no idea goodreads was owned by amazon. Definitely checking out bookwyrm for that alone, let alone everything else.

[โ€“] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

That doesn't even remotely surprise me coming from Amazon, inflating itself with garbage.

I totally agree on giving Bookwyrm a chance. To be honest, I had no clue what a "fediverse" was until a week ago, but I'm fascinated and inspired by the idea of it. I am loving all of these new, interesting platforms that aren't run by some soulless billionaires who care more about ad revenue than actual content or users' interests.