From my friend Stephen comes a link to whichbook.net, a site that claims to give “readers an enjoyable and intuitive way to find books to match their mood.”
There have been many other kicks at this can, perhaps most famously the firefly project that came out of MIT.
Unlike commercial services that seek to use aggregated reader/listener/viewer preferences to drive sales, whichbook.net is a non-profit setup, run by librarians.
While I’m sure this service will be useful to some — Stephen says “I threw in some criteria and got books that i had read that fit the bill perfectly and some books i hadn’t read.” — I’m perplexed by this set of selections. Do people really choose books this way? Do you say to yourself “I could use a good read, something extremely gentle, a little disgusting and very bleak?”
I realize that my random “books that have interesting covers” method is prone to failure, but this seems a little too intentioned for my tastes. Like genetic engineering for books.
Comments
I’ve often gone by the ‘wine
I’ve often gone by the ‘wine bottle has an interesting label’ approach, and it’s served me reasonably well.
Good Morning,We would like to
Good Morning,
We would like to introduce a free real time book price comparison service www.AAABookSearch.com
AAABookSearch.com provides you with price comparison from 40+ bookstores in US, UK and Canada. You can save
up to 75% off the market list price. In addition, you can read book reviews, customer reviews, book ranking, table of contents & more.
You can search books by author, title, keyword or ISBN. You can also browse by subject or author.
If you are a author you are welcome to register your name by sending us a email at aaabooksearch@oceanviewtechnologies.com
We encourage you to link to our site and provide this free service to your users.
Thank you,
www.AAABookSearch.com
www.AAAMovieSearch.com
www.AAAMusicsSearch.com
Add new comment