Besides Goodreads there are actually four other really good online book communities: LibraryThing, Shelfari, Booklikes and Biblionasium. Each site offers basically the same thing: a virtual bookshelf for books you have read, will read and are currently reading plus reviews/discussion with people. Some of these sites are more detailed than the others and offer more bells and whistles, but each of them are great places to become part of an online book community.
Goodreads
Goodreads is an easy-to-use website that looks a lot like Facebook by appearances and actually works with the site. Once you register your information you can instantly connect with people you know from FB. It will tell you all the books that your friends have read, are wanting to read or are currently reading now. I thought that was nice because it is logical to start book talks with people you already see somewhat on a daily basis, versus completely starting from scratch with strangers.
The home page also has recommendations for you, along with books you can directly link from Amazon. It has five main tabs: home, mybooks, groups, recommendations and explore. My books has a listing of all the books you have told Goodreads you have read. It shows you your rating, date read and date added. I tried creating a k-2 shelf and a 3-6 shelf. I was not completely able to "sort," the books onto the shelves, but perhaps on further investigation I could. The only way I could see them on different shelves was by "books have read, books will read and books planning to read."
It also has some helpful links to the left side like: most read author, stats, recommendations and shelf cloud for multiple shelves. Groups has multiple groups you can join in with. Groups in the area, featured groups, official groups, groups who share your same tastes and so forth.
Explore simply has new releases, featured authors and books of the month you can look into. There are also giveaways, reviews, new releases and popular releases of the year. Simplistic, well-connected and easy-to-use. Goodreads is my favorite of the five mentioned.
Booklikes
Now for a change of pace. If you like talking about books you have read and want to have discussions on them, then Booklikes is the place for you. The homepage is an immediate feed of blogs that members are talking about. It encourages you to do the same. Goodreads offers just quick tidbits of what your friends are saying about books they are reading, while this site is offering full-blown discussions on books.
If having lengthy discussions isn't for you at-- least straight off the bat--you can go to the left side and click on a bright green rectangle noted "dashboard" and you can choose other things to do: shelf, timeline, discussions, friends, book catalog, giveaways, events, book clubs, daily deals and other neat things.
Again, I looked into sorting them my way, this time by genre. I was not able to do that, but I could sort them by "books have read and books planning to read." It also let me choose if I wanting a "listing format," of the books or just a "bookcovers format" of the books. I chose the bookcovers.
Although, not initially my favorite, this site could grow on me. I liked all of the features it had to offer. Like Goodreads it was simplistic and you could upload video, quotes or text directly to the site. I found that quite interesting.
Library Thing
Library Thing is not as pretty to look at as either of the other two mentioned above. When I first looked into it, it made me think of what a working author might like to use. It has several snippets of things that it offers all on its home page. While I didn't particularly like it, someone else might.
I looked in the "your books," tab and was able to see a "listing format," and a "covers format." The listing format was rather busy looking, but had some wonderful links that allows you to: connect with book reviews, make reviews, connect instantly to blogs on it, see topics that it touches on, see the ratings, buy it through Amazon, Audible, World Cat, bookstores near you, find ratings on it and when it was at its highest in popularity. There were so many links I found myself lost in it all! However again... this aspect of the site shows me that a working author could really use some of this information.
There was one link to the site that I particularly liked. It catered to my high-interest in trivia. It gave lots of facts about: top-rated authors, top-rated books, most-reviewed books, largest libraries and other little-known facts. I particularly liked knowing that one of my favorite authors was on this site and uses it. Just knowing that motivated me to check in more. Another interesting feature was that it allows you to connect locally with people and events happening around you. You put in your zip-code and it connects you with near-by bookstores and libraries. It found two events coming up, "Fancy Tea and Fantasy Authors," and Jan Jarboe Russell in January. While this site was not my absolute favorite. It is a great site.
Shelfari
This site is sponsored by Amazon.com. I personally like Amazon a lot. I'm able to find some great deals on the site so using it in conjunction with an online book community makes sense. Goodreads is cashing in on the personal appeal through a site like Facebook and Shelfari it seems is cashing in on the material appeal of Amazon and connecting you to books that way.
Again, like all of the other sites, I was only able to sort by "books read," and "books planning to read." This time the shelf actually looked like a shelf, which I liked. I could only see my books as a bookcover and not as a list. There were a lot fewer bells and whistles here. I could rate the books, link it to a blog and mark it as a favorite or put it on my wishlist, but that was about it. It is not nearly as complex as LibraryThing.
However if I wanted more options I could click on a tab marked books and see lots of great things that they had to offer. Really though the Amazon website has a lot of the same things and I didn't find it so different. When I tried to connect to people through the "community," tab I got an error every time. I thought that was ironic. I tried "members like me," and "most active," but still couldn't get through.
All in all I found this site to be pretty good, but not enough to come back to. Amazon.com offers pretty much everything I need and plus I thought the other three sites were more reliable if I wanted to connect with people to discuss books.
BiblioNasium
This site is completely different from all the rest. This is a kid-friendly site that is password locked for parents, teachers and students. As an educator I could go in and buy books, obtain reports, make book suggestions to my students, find resources to share with parents, students and colleagues or even set up "book challenges," for my class. The site is primarily for elementary aged students, perhaps middle school as well. The previous three would be better for high school.
When I looked in the resources tab I was amazed at how many wonderful links there were. I liked how it brought so many great resources together. It linked things like: reading organizations, book lists like award winners, best of lists, notable articles, fun stuff for kids, lexile connections for parents, places to find book donations and book clubs. I felt this link alone was the most valuable of all because it was loaded with so many great things that parents could immediately access.
I also liked how the main sidebar remained there no matter what page you looked at. Another thing I particularly liked was that students can see your book shelf and see what books are your favorite and what you recommend that they read. There have been countless times parents have asked me what books I recommend or where they can find certain books. This site has all of that.
The only thing I thought it lacked was a place for students to talk about books they have read. It did have a "review," tab, but that was it. With regards to the age of the user, this is probably for the best. Literary discussions should most likely happen in class and this site would only be a springboard into such activities.
BiblioNasium is a winner. It's simple, well-organized, password protected, well-linked and easy to use for parents, students and teachers. I like it.
Conclusion
There are some great sites out there. Shelfari was my least favorite and Goodreads was my most favorite. I felt Goodreads had the best balance of links and was the easiest to use. I also liked that it connected me to friends I already knew for book discussions, whereas the others did not. BiblioNasium was great as well. I think in the future it could replace a lot of paper logs I use in class. It would be beneficial if there was an app for it so that parents wouldn't have to stop and use their computer, but could quickly pull it up on their tablet and fill it in that way. That was something I didn't see, but overall those were the winners I found.









I didn't think about LibraryThing looking similar to Follett, but after I read your post, I can see your point. I didn't care for LibraryThing, but I will still use Goodreads. Its' hard to beat!
ReplyDeleteOne thing that is good about all of the sites which offer reviews is that, if you are planning a collection, you can see what others liked about a book. I got a lot of recommendations from students, and this is a good way to see whether it's a favorite with lots of people or just a few. Stretch those book budget dollars!
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