enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Add books, movies and music from Amazon, the Library of Congress and 4,941 other libraries. Track your reading progress, rate and review. See detailed charts and stats about your library and reading life. Find your new favorite book with personalized recommendations.

  3. Catalog your books online - LibraryThing

    www.librarything.com/?highload=1

    Add books, movies and music from Amazon, the Library of Congress and 4,941 other libraries. Track your reading progress, rate and review. See detailed charts and stats about your library and reading life. Find your new favorite book with personalized recommendations.

  4. LibraryThing

    www.librarything.com/messages

    LibraryThing is completely free. Add books, movies and music from Amazon, the Library of Congress and 4,941 other libraries. Track your reading progress, rate and review. See detailed charts and stats about your library and reading life. Find your new favorite book with personalized recommendations.

  5. cataloging « The LibraryThing Blog

    blog.librarything.com/category/cataloging

    Check it out and add your non-book library at https://www.librarything.com/addbooks. Medium version: LibraryThing is a book site, and will remain so. But many members, especially our small libraries, have always cataloged other media, such as movies and music.

  6. The LibraryThing Android App is here! « The LibraryThing Blog

    blog.librarything.com/2017/06/librarything-android

    Browse and search your library overall and by collection. Add books, CDs, and DVDs by scanning barcodes. The barcode scanning is SUPER FAST! Add items by searching by title, author, ISBN, etc. Browse and upload covers, using your Android’s camera.

  7. What makes LibraryThing LibraryThing? « The LibraryThing Blog

    blog.librarything.com/2013/04/what-makes-librarything-librarything

    LibraryThing means different things to different people. Some use it to record what they’re reading now; some catalog every book they own. Some talk on our groups all day long, others never interact with anyone. Some share everything to Facebook, others keep their library private.

  8. import « The LibraryThing Blog

    blog.librarything.com/category/import

    On LibraryThing, go to the Import Books page (via the “More” tab at the top of any page on LibraryThing). Click the “Choose File” button and choose the “collection_books” file from your desktop, then click “Upload.”

  9. Introducing TinyCat: The OPAC for Tiny Libraries - LibraryThing

    blog.librarything.com/2016/04/introducing-tinycat-the-opac-for-tiny-libraries

    Cataloging your books on LibraryThing allows you to use TinyCat—no moving of records required. TinyCat is an extra layer on top of your existing LibraryThing account, which turns your LibraryThing library into an online catalog.

  10. new features « The LibraryThing Blog

    blog.librarything.com/category/new-features

    “Mark and Boost Electronic Resources” turns your catalog toward digital resources, while preserving what makes a catalog important—a single point of access to ALL library resources, not a vendor silo.

  11. new feature « The LibraryThing Blog

    blog.librarything.com/category/new-feature

    TinyCat turns LibraryThing into a powerful, simple, online catalog for so-called “tiny libraries” (less than 20,000 titles). These smallest libraries—churches, synagogues, small schools, community centers, academic departments, etc.—have been using LibraryThing to catalog their collections for almost a decade.