Money-Saving Power
of Your Library Card
๐๐๐๐๐๐๐By Shara Tibken * April 9, 2023 Your membership gets you free streaming movies, audio-books, language lessons and more.
All free…with a library card.
One
way to lower your costs:
Lean into your local library’s free digital
perks, which go well beyond eBooks. (Libraries also offer plenty of non-digital perks, such as museum passes and ukulele loans as well as bike repairs.)
“Our digital presence is every bit as important as any of our physical locations,” said John Szabo, city librarian of the Los Angeles Public Library. “It is just so, so, so popular.”
Freebies vary from library to library, but several things are broadly available - such as eBooks, audio-books, videos and educational apps. Check your branch’s website or app to figure out exactly what you can get. And don’t forget that other library systems, some of which have richer resources, can also give you a card.
Library Basics
Open a library card wherever you’re eligible. Most libraries require you to live in a city to get a card there. Some are more flexible. Many California public libraries, such as those in San Francisco and Los Angeles, grant cards to all state residents. New York City’s public libraries - in New York, Brooklyn and Queens - allow anyone who lives, works, owns a home or studies in the state to open a free account. (Queens lets you apply remotely.)
Download library eBooks - even for Kindle.
For eBooks, download the Libby app. It is used by about 90% of public libraries in North America, said Steve Potash,
chief executive of Libby parent company OverDrive. As so with physical
library books, there are a limited number of licensed digital copies
available from each library. This means you might have to wait weeks,
then read quickly once you get the one you want. You can read inside the Libby app or with Amazon’s
Kindle app and e-readers. To send a Libby eBook to Kindle, look in the
Libby Shelf tab for your borrowed book, then click “Read With…” to see
the Kindle option. Sign into your Amazon account, and you’ll then see
the book listed in your Kindle library on your devices.
Compare other ebook services. Libraries
often use several ebook lending services, which can help you get a book
quicker. The San Francisco Public Library, for instance, also offers Axis 360 and Hoopla Digital.
Axis
360, which is owned by library content and software provider Baker
& Taylor, works similarly to the way Libby does - a library licenses a
certain number of copies. On April 4, the Libby app showed that all
SFPL’s 175 digital copies of Ms. Hoover’s novel “It Starts With Us” were
checked out, resulting in a four-week wait for would-be borrowers. On
Axis 360, where the SFPL has only 16 digital copies, seven were
available right away.
Hoopla’s
catalog is available to all patrons immediately, but there is a catch:
It has few new bestsellers such as Ms. Hoover’s book. On Hoopla, SFPL
City Librarian Michael Lambert said, “You will find more esoteric,
obscure content.”
Get on eBook wait-lists for coming releases.
Dying to read David Baldacci’s
“Simply Lies” as soon as it hits shelves later this month? Some
libraries, such as the Brooklyn Public Library, let you get on a virtual
“Coming Soon” Libby wait list weeks ahead of release.
Other Libby libraries have “Skip the Line,” which lets you immediately check out select popular ebooks.
Read free comic books, magazines and newspapers.
Hoopla,
which is owned by library media distributor Midwest Tape, offers more
than 25,000 comic books, including the Marvel and DC franchises. It will
be adding thousands of manga titles later this year, said Hoopla
founder Jeff Jankowski. The app lets you read comics page by page, or zoom in on one panel at a time.
Another common library offering, digital periodicals, can often be accessed through the PressReader and Flipster apps.
Virtual Entertainment
Watch free videos - including plenty of children’s shows.
You can check out videos through Hoopla and OverDrive-owned Kanopy. They include a mix of new and old TV shows and films, including Oscar winners, PBS programming and documentaries - just no fresh blockbusters or series made by platforms such as Netflix or Hulu. Borrowing
limits can vary widely, so it can be hard to binge. In San Francisco,
Kanopy views are capped at 15 a month per account. The SFPL also limits
all Hoopla content - including eBooks, music and audio books - to 30 items
per user each month.
Both Kanopy and Hoopla have child-friendly modes with age-appropriate content. Kanopy Kids allows unlimited watching.
Listen to audiobooks and music.
Libby,
Hoopla and Axis 360 offer audio-books through their apps, and can play
when offline. You can adjust the playback speed and set a sleep timer in
each.
Hoopla
also lets you check out and download full albums from most major record
labels, except Sony Music, Mr. Jankowski said. It has Ms. Swift’s
“Midnights” album as well as her back catalog. Other libraries, such as
the DC Public Library in Washington, offer Freegal Music.
More Freebies
Learn a new language or get live tutoring. Language classes, both virtual and in person, are another common library offering. One program provided by SFPL is Rosetta Stone, while Queens frequently offers online and in-person classes for English, Korean and Mandarin, among others.
The San Francisco Public Library offers Brainfuse HelpNow live tutoring. Tutoring
for science, math and other subjects from kindergarten through college
are available if your library offers the Brainfuse HelpNow service. The
live, individual sessions are text based and take place during set hours
every day.
Get career advice.
Brainfuse
JobNow offers adults live, chat-based career coaching. You can download
templates and submit your rรฉsumรฉ for expert feedback. Many libraries
also provide free LinkedIn Learning video courses to help you develop business, technology and creative skills. Some libraries offer even more specialized job training.
Find legal forms, investor tips, genealogy and more.
“These
are all subscriptions that people would otherwise be paying for,” said
April DeRome, electronic resources librarian at the DC Public Library.๐ ๐ ๐
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