Shoutout to Libation, that allows you to download and deDRM your Audible library.
Oooooo, but there be dragons.
Documentation? Yer lookin’ at it This is a single-developer personal passion project. Support, response, updates, enhancements, bug fixes etc are as my free time allows I have a full-time job, a life, and a finite attention span. Therefore a lot of time can potentially go by with no improvements of any kind
It’s good they put it up front though. There can be a lot of entitlement with oss users sometimes and setting expectations can help alleviate that.
Actually good for the developer. He is doing it out of his passion and faith in OSS. What more should we want of him? The dude is already a hero.
It’s just a warning not to get into it unless you’re capable of helping yourself.
That’s true of all self-hosting.
De-DRMing audible audio books and self hosting are not inextricably linked. I just wanted to repost it to make sure people saw it before diving in.
The origins of the phrase “here be dragons” is one of placing a warning of caution on an unexplored area of the map. It says nothing negative about the developer.
In my experience, that’s just true of all software. There’s a couple of high end InDesign plugins I use for work. Aside from that, I’m on my own.
You don’t really need much documentation. You set it up on windows once, which is pretty intuitive and then you copy the config to your server and run it headless. It pulls your library in fixed intervals. I haven’t touched it once in the year it is running now
It works now, even if later he gets tired of it and walks away it still works now.
I actually used a Windows app, de audible I think to get all mine out years ago. But I am always glad to see alternatives.
Awesome.
Thank you for this
Reminder that “self hosting” media is an extra step, you can do the same with “saving media locally and playing it”
But how will I bring up my NAS in conversations at parties?
Tell them you’ll bring the music but instead play books at them during quiet times…lord of the rings anyone?
what is thisyarty thing
The author actually explains that his original solution was just saving them locally on his phone and playing them from there, but that was too much legwork for his wife to want to switch from a cloud service like Audible. So the whole self hosting part is to become “Audible” for his wife lol.
I feel like the answer to the question “why are you self-hosting” is almost always “because my significant other/family/friends use it”
One of the big draws for me is the scrobbling, across a lot of my self-hosted apps. Comics, shows, books, whatever. I love that I can watch some of a show, or read some of a comic series, then go months without worrying about where I was before picking it back up again. I can pick up where I left off, which is one area where simply having files on a file-system falls short.
And it’s a valid point. Services like audible and Netflix offer something that can not be matched by traditional storage, that’s why they are profitable to begin with. Streaming content instead of downloading it to each device is a good selling point, one which is covered by self hosting this stuff.
That’s great, until you want to switch devices while still keeping your progress.
TLDR: Audiobookshelf
Been selfhosting it for a few years. Audible is an interesting comparison and I agree with the author that ABS is superior. But it’s not without its issues and challenges. Any good podcast app has vastly superior UX. That said, I’m a hoarder and I just have to store every podcast I subscribe to for some reason.
Nice.
I was paying for a family subscription for a major audiobook provider for a while. That changed after I used a 3rd party app to listen to their audiobooks and apparently broke their eula, and they were threatening to sue me and my 7 year old kid for it. Kinda killed the spirit to pay for their service.
For those on iOS looking for a companion app, check out plappa for a great app to access your Audiobookshelf/jellyfin instance. It works flawlessly for me, no data collection, and it allows downloading books in advance for on the go if you choose not to have external access to your server.
I knew it was gonna be Audiobookshelf as soon as I saw the headline. Great software. My wife has all her books hosted on it on our NAS, and it barely takes any resources. I have it hosted alongside Plex in a VM on a teeny tiny Ryzen 5500u Mini-PC.
Edit - I’m even more amused that I have almost the same configuration as the article author, Proxmox server hosting the guest, just mine’s an Ubuntu 24.04 server VM instead of LXC. That little server hosts Plex, Audiobookshelf, Lyrion, and AssetUPnP, pretty much handles all my media stuff, plus a separate Home Assistant VM, and has resources to spare.
Prologue on iOS does a great job of device syncing my Plex audiobook library. And no subscription requirement for once.
For any other Audiobookshelf users looking at that article and thinking, “Wait, how did they get that nice wooden shelf look in the UI?”
Login as Admin
Settings
Change these settings to be enabled:If you want a nicer looking (though less feature complete) app I can really recommend Lissen.
Nice article! I’ve been using Audiobookshelf (win) for a year and a bit. Works great with one exception, I can’t upgrade it past 2.17.16 on my Win11 box (non-docker). Any attempt to take it past that gives a non-responsive server. Not a big deal because that version is pretty stable.
What I really want is a a similar project for epub files. I’ve not been able to find a web based library that allows easy download and auth based management.
That’s a solved problem, the answer is Calibre. If you want a nicer interface and some other fluff you can install calibre-web as a frontend for it. Calibre-web is very interesting if you have a Kobo e-reader because you can configure it as your store and get the books you add to calibre to magically appear on the e-reader with a nice download button next to it.
Audiobookshelf supports EPUB files and other ebook formats. You can put them alongside audiobooks (offering a UI option to either read or listen) or use purely ebooks although obviously a little overkill if you aren’t using the audio features at all
I use Calibre to manage my librairy on my NAS, and COPS (https://github.com/seblucas/cops) to access it from anywhere. COPS just read the Calibre database saved on the NAS, and displays it as a self-hosted web site with all categories (authors, ratings, languages,…) and download links.
Oooo thank you for this. I already use Calibre but their web offering is imho kinda bad. This looks like it’s pretty much a drop in solution to my problem. If I throw it behind a zero trust page I can even open it up to the open internet.
Thank you for this!
jellyfin with OPDS plugin. you can download books directly from any OPDS compatible reader (Koreader, Moonreader+, etc)
I’d suggest looking into Kavita. I’ve been using it for a while now and it works great as a server to read and organize my epubs.
Have you tried Calibre?
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I just wish their official app would get out of beta already. It’s been stuck in limbo forever.
Check out plappa
Thanks for the heads up! Tired of trying to make the Emby app work for audiobooks.
I was really confused about this cause the app is great. Googled Plappa and realized you were stuck on IOS. My heart goes out to you.
Anyone does this with jellyfin?
Ive tried for a wile, but the features are just lacking. Finamp is good for music now. But for audiobook i am firm on audiobookshelf.
Doesn’t work, I feel. I’ve been looking at alternatives, gonna take a look at this audiobookshelf now.
No, but plex has terrible support for audiobooks.
If it’s anything like Emby, it blows for audiobooks. Lacking essential features, and regularly loses its place.
My wife likes murders and romance, any suggestions for eBook?
Like where to find them?
“Self-host” is just a euphemism for “pirate” right? …Right?
You can buy audiobooks outside of Audible: https://soundbooththeater.com/series/dungeon-crawler-carl/
Not necessarily.
No. It’s a term which means a services hosted by…yourself.
No. I paid for all my books but so not use Audible etc to access them