Thursday, September 22, 2011

Kindle Kin.....

The best news of the week....Wednesday, Kindle announced library lending was starting. Of course, I jumped right in and was disappointed that I couldn't access it. I did find a link to an online article that indicated it was being rolled out over a couple of days. Patience.....not my strong suit!

Today, I went back and tried again. It works and I'm reading a book already!

I've already learned a few things about this process and wanted to share it with you.  
I live in Chicopee and have used the Chicopee Public Library for years. I've requested the books I wanted via the CW/MARS website and then go into the library when the book is ready for me. These books come from all over western Mass. The ebook process uses the same website, but a different section.
From this page, I clicked on the Kindle link
The page then opens to allow for a search. I figured I'd just scroll through the choices.....
I went through the first 10 pages and NONE of the books were available to check out...all said "add to my waiting list". This is great but there's little or no options for checking out a book NOW?
Ok, took a deep breath and looked around.
Just above the sorting options there is a search option. I put a check mark in the box to include Only show titles with copies available,
then clicked on 'search' without putting anything specific in the search field. It brought up a list for 1200+ books. You can search by release date, popularity, etc. This is helpful if you want to read a book NOW! If you're searching for a specific book, you can unclick the box and just search for the book you want. If it's not available to loan right away, you request it by adding it to your waiting list. Kind of what we already do at the library when we request DTB.
Since the Chicopee Library and CW/MARS system is relatively small in comparison to big cities like Boston, we may find that some of the books we want to read are not even available as an ebook, or that you'll be waiting quite a while to get the book.  I think it's going to take some time before libraries start spending more of their budgets on ebooks.

BUT that doesn't mean we're out of luck.
I signed up for a ecard on the Boston Public Library website.
Boston Public Library (BPL)
You need to be a Massachusetts resident and the ecard is good for 3 years. (If you're reading this outside of Mass., it should work in a similar way for a big city in your state.)

This link will take you directly to the BPL/Overdrive search.
BPL Overdrive
Because it's a larger library system, the collections are larger.
For example, when I searched for books that were "available", the search yielded over 2400 choices, and that was filtering for only fiction choices.
Unfortunately, it pulls in all fiction, including childrens but I just scrolled through those. Same thing as with the CW/MARS, you can click (or not click) on the box to include only those titles that are available. I was quite happy to see that in my quick scroll, I saw 2 books that are on my Amazon wish list.
 
 
 
Once you choose a book, on either library site, you will add the book to your "cart", then proceed to checkout, or continue browsing. When you go to checkout, you will be prompted to enter your library card number. You will then click on the button that says Get Kindle.
This takes you to the Amazon page for the book you've chosen. The rest of the process is similar to Amazon Kindle book purchases. If your Kindle wifi is on, and you're in a wifi zone, the book transfers wirelessly immediately.

Once your book loan is finished (14 days for most books but you can opt for 7 days), the book will no longer be available in your Kindle.

Questions? Confused? Let me know, we'll work it out together!

Happy reading!
Pauline

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