Much like good movies or music albums, you’ll find that interesting books are hard to come by.
The right tools can help you find what you should be reading.
Highly Reco is the newer of the two and focuses on newsmakers in the digital media age.
You’ll find recommendations fromMarc Andreessen,James Altucher,Peter Thiel,Danielle Morrill, and others.
Along with the recommended book, you’ll also get their short review if they’ve provided one.
With one click, you’re free to get the book from Amazon.
You should also check out the curated Collections, like the one onbeautiful coffee table books to inspire conversations.
Its categorization of books is detailed and a pleasure to browse, and it’s packed with features.
And be honest, aren’t these more accurate than the genre-based pigeon slotting you often find?
Along with that, Hawaii Project has a"What Should I Read Next"book recommendation engine.
There are no lyrics, of course, it’s all instrumental and best with headphones.
Booktrack is mostly populated withfree classics from Project Gutenbergand other copyright-free sources.
There’s something romantic about Tablo that will appeal to any book lover.
Most voracious readers also have the writer’s bug and want to publish their own work.
It’sa community to discover books, in the end.
While its writing and publishing features are robust, it’s the reading experience that really stands out.
The more you read on Tablo, the more it understands your preferences.
Tablo is free to read, but requires a paid plan to write.
Do you prefer to rely on machines that match your interests to other books using smart algorithms?