Posted by Anne M on Monday, Feb 5, 2018
Sometimes some small details can make a big difference in how you experience something, especially if it saves time. Here are some small things you can do in Libby, our app for OverDrive eBooks and audiobooks that make reading (or listening) even easier.
Get right to what you want by changing your search preferences
By clicking the plus sign, you can change how your search results are filtered and sorted. See only what is available right now or only titles in a specific format. Or change to have Libby sort by what’s most popular, by title or author, or by release date.
Like to know where you are or how much you have left to go?
One of the things I love about a book, a real bounded, paper book, is looking at the number of pages in my left hand versus the number in my right. It is satisfying as the pages transfer from one hand to the other. With audiobooks (or eBooks), this sort of translates to the percentage completed. To find out where you are in a book in the Libby app, tap on the time left or the page numbers above the timeline. For eBooks, it will show the pages left in the chapter. Another tap will give you the percentage of the total book completed. The audiobook will give you these options, but in time.

Want to read the next book in a series?
You can find series information pretty easily now in Libby. Searching the series name will bring up results that indicate a series search. You can search for a series and the results will come up…in order! And each book in the series will indicate what number it is in the series in the book details, as well as the other titles in the series—and the order to read them in.

The main story that threads this novel is of the love of Samir Vij and Firdaus Khan. They are both skilled in their crafts: Samir an apprentice in his family’s perfumery and Firdaus, a student of calligraphy, the only female in her father’s studio. While their love grows, the British Raj dissolves and Partition begins. And Samir is a Hindu and Firdaus is a Muslim. The new borders that create Pakistan and India doesn’t just sever land. But this book is much more than a love story. It is about finding meaning in oneself when everything is taken away. It is about how trauma and history are inherited. It is about what memories we hold on to and what we don’t. And it is about perfume. Malhotra brings scents alive along with the memories they capture. I enjoyed this novel. -Anne M