How your shelf
finds its people.
Three chapters. One shelf. And the readers waiting on the other side.
Build your shelf
First, the fun part. Every book you add says something about who you are — the classics, the comfort reads, the one you've been meaning to finish for years. Add it all.
Flip the book over
Hold your phone to the barcode on the back, and it lands on your shelf in the time it takes to put it down. Typing the title works too, if you are going from memory.
Your whole collection
That shelf in the bedroom. The boxes in storage. The "to-read" pile that's become a structural hazard. All of it.
Set your intentions
Each book gets a status: will lend, want to discuss, giving away, or hunting for. Because owning isn't the same as sharing.
Lend, borrow, repeat
Books were meant to travel. The best ones come back dog-eared, coffee-stained, and loved. The very best don't come back at all — they've found a new home.
No shipping, no hassle
Your matches are nearby. Walk over, grab a coffee, hand them the book — the way lending was always meant to work.
Find what you seek
Mark a book as "hunting for" and we'll tell you when someone nearby has it. No more refreshing used bookstore websites.
Give books away
Some books need to move on. Mark them "free to good home" and let someone else fall in love with them.
Find your people
Here's the thing about readers: we're desperate to talk about what we've read. The right person will understand why you cried at that ending. We help you find them.
Shelf twins
People with suspiciously similar taste. The kind who'll finish your sentences about obscure plot points.
Discussion matches
Mark a book "want to discuss" and find the people who need to talk through that ending as badly as you do.
Local bookstores too
Independent shops with character. The kind where the owner has read everything and loves to argue about it.
A note from the management
In which we explain ourselves, because every good book has a bit at the end where the author rambles about fonts and paper stock.
biblocal is a community non-profit initiative, which is a fancy way of saying nobody's getting rich here and we're all doing this because we genuinely believe books should move around more than they do.*
The whole thing is open source, because the best ideas—like the best books—want to be shared. If you can code, write, design, or just have strong opinions about library classification systems, we'd love your help. Pull requests welcome. Constructive criticism tolerated. Baked goods appreciated but not required.**
Ready to see who's reading near you?
Your shelf is waiting. Your people are out there. Let's introduce you.
Build Your Shelf