Magicbookshelf.org – a spoiler-aware companion for public domain classics
philipfweiss
14 points
3 comments
June 29, 2026
Related Discussions
Found 5 related stories in 736.6ms across 14,015 title embeddings via pgvector HNSW
- Project Gutenberg – keeps getting better JSeiko · 832 pts · May 15, 2026 · 48% similar
- Reading Is Magic gHeadphone · 49 pts · April 12, 2026 · 48% similar
- Open Book Touch: open-source e-reader surprisetalk · 85 pts · July 17, 2026 · 48% similar
- Little Free Library TigerUniversity · 100 pts · March 01, 2026 · 47% similar
- Kagi Magic amirmasoudabdol · 49 pts · June 12, 2026 · 46% similar
Discussion Highlights (1 comments)
philipfweiss
I built a small, free site for reading public-domain books (magicbookshelf.org). Today, it has three books: 1. The Brothers Karamazov 2. Crime and Punishment 3. Pride and Prejudice You don't have to make an account and there are no ads. I just think the classics deserve a nicer home than a wall of plain text. When I first tried reading Karamazov, it was really difficult for me to keep up with everything. Karamazov is the book where everyone gets lost in the names. Alexey / Alyosha / Alyoshka, Dmitri / Mitya, Fyodor Pavlovitch, Smerdyakov, two different Ivanovnas. The usual fix is to keep a wiki or a character list open, but those spoil everything that happens later. So the reader comes with a companion I call the Margin: a guide to the people, places, and ideas in each book that only ever shows what you'd know at your current point. For example.. Alyosha's entry while you're in chapter 3 and you get who he is by chapter 3, with nothing about his later arc. A few notes: The translation is Constance Garnett There's optional narration if you'd rather listen. I make and run it on my own, so if you spot a wrong note in the Margin, a typo, or an entry that gives away too much too early, please tell me.