For people who love to read but don’t have a lot of extra cash to spend on books, nothing beats the public library. Love ya, Ben Franklin!
In recent years, many libraries have started offering e-books that you can check out for a few weeks, just like the real thing. Unfortunately, despite the plethora of e-book readers in the App Store, you couldn’t read these DRM-protected library titles on your iPhone, iPod, or iPad.
Now you can. Bluefire Reader now supports not only ePub and PDF formats, but also the Adobe DRM used by most libraries. I just checked out Dennis Lehane’s “Shutter Island” and Junot Diaz’s “The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao,” both free of charge, both without getting in the car and driving to the library.
However, I had to jump through some hoops to make it happen, and the end result wasn’t always perfect. Indeed, if you’re expecting this process to have Kindle-like simplicity, don’t.
For starters, you need a library card and/or an online account with your local library. When I signed into mine, the “ebook” section listed only NetLibrary (which has a pretty weak selection) as a download source. However, I remembered previously downloading audiobooks via OverDrive–a service that also carries e-books.
Sure enough, when I clicked through, I was able to browse and download from OverDrive’s much larger e-book selection. (It’s where I scored the two aforementioned titles.) Your mileage may vary, but I suspect that’s where most libraries will lead you.
OverDrive offers e-books in ePub and PDF formats. Whenever possible, choose the former; reading PDFs on an iPhone or iPod is not pleasant because you’re looking at, well, PDFs, not formatted e-book files. You can’t adjust the font size or much of anything else. ePubs afford a much, much better reading experience.
Alas, format notwithstanding, the book you want may not be available for checkout. As with print editions in a real library, there are a limited number of licenses to go around. (Likewise, most books “expire” after three weeks, meaning they’re no longer readable unless you check them out again.)
I was able to place a hold on popular titles like “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” and “The Help,” but without knowing when they would become available.
Before you can read any downloaded book, you’ll need to install Adobe Digital Editions (available free for Windows and Mac OS). With that step done, you can download your library book–which you’ll need to open at least once in Digital Editions before you can transfer it to Bluefire Reader.
To do that, you’ll use iTunes’ “sideloading” feature. Check out Bluefire’s help page for complete instructions.
Whew! Like I said, all this is enough to make one long for the simplicity of a Kindle. But once you learn the ropes, it’s actually pretty quick and easy. And, hey, isn’t it worth a little effort to score e-books for free?