Public Library • Libby • Audiobooks • Free Learning

Use Libby to turn your library card into a free learning tool.

Libby is one of the best untapped free resources out there. It connects your public library card to ebooks, audiobooks, magazines, and other digital library materials.

Read, listen, or switch between both. It does not matter. What matters is getting access to good books without needing to buy every title individually.

Student advantage: Before paying for a technical book, certification book, audiobook, or popular nonfiction title, check your public library first.
Public library card Free or low-cost through your local library
Libby app Connect your card to digital books and audiobooks
Borrow and listen Walks, commutes, breaks, and study gaps
Build knowledge Cybersecurity, Linux, AI, history, science, and more
A library card can unlock thousands of dollars worth of books without subscriptions, ads, or buying every title.

What is Libby?

Libby is an app and website from OverDrive that many public libraries use for digital lending. If your library supports it, you can borrow ebooks and audiobooks with your library card.

Free with a library card

Your public library, on your phone

Libby works like a normal library. You borrow titles, place holds, return items, and wait when a popular book is already checked out.

The difference is that the book or audiobook shows up on your phone, tablet, browser, or ereader.

Why it matters

It makes learning fit real life

I listen to audiobooks constantly: on walks, in between classes, while commuting, and during small gaps in the day. That time adds up.

Real-world cybersecurity often sounds like a spy novel, but it is not fiction. Malware, surveillance, social engineering, infrastructure attacks, privacy, and cybercrime are part of the front lines of modern technology.

How to set up Libby

The setup is simple. The hardest part is usually getting or finding your library card information.

1

Get a public library card

Start with your local public library. Many libraries let residents apply online, but some require an in-person visit or proof of address.

2

Install Libby

Install the Libby app on your phone or tablet, or use Libby in a web browser.

Search for:

Libby by OverDrive
3

Find your library

Open Libby and search for your library system. In a large city, this might be a citywide library system. In other areas, it may be a county or regional library network.

4

Sign in with your card

Enter your library card number and PIN/password. If you do not know the PIN, check your library website or contact the library.

5

Borrow a book

Search for a title, borrow it if available, or place a hold if it is checked out. Popular books may have a wait list.

6

Read or listen

Use ebooks when you want to read closely. Use audiobooks when you are walking, commuting, cleaning, or between classes.

Why audiobooks are underrated

Audiobooks are not a shortcut. They are a way to use time that would otherwise disappear.

Walks

Turn walks into learning time

A 30-minute walk becomes a chapter. A few walks per week becomes multiple books per semester.

Between classes

Use small gaps

Ten minutes here and fifteen minutes there adds up, especially with nonfiction and technical history.

Cybersecurity

Real incidents are compelling

Cybersecurity history often has espionage, mistakes, investigations, infrastructure, nation-states, and human decisions. It is technical, but it can be very readable.

What to search for first

Start with books that make technical subjects feel real. You do not need to begin with the densest textbook.

Cybersecurity
Look for real-world stories
malware, hacking history, privacy, social engineering, cybercrime, infrastructure attacks
Linux
Look for practical beginner books
Linux command line, shell, system administration, servers, Raspberry Pi
Networking
Look for plain-language explanations
networking basics, CCNA, TCP/IP, Wireshark, packet analysis
Programming
Look for project-based books
Python automation, Java, C++, data structures, web scraping, databases
AI
Look for concept books
machine learning, AI history, responsible AI, human-computer interaction

Good habits

Libby is most useful when you treat it like a learning system, not just an app.

Do this

Build a reading queue

  1. Place holds on books that are not available yet.
  2. Keep a short list of books you want to borrow next.
  3. Try audiobooks during walks or commutes.
  4. Use ebooks when you need code examples, diagrams, or close reading.
  5. Return books early if you finish them so the next person gets access.
Avoid this

Do not turn it into clutter

It is easy to borrow too many books at once. Start with one or two that match your current project or class.

The goal is not to collect titles. The goal is to build understanding.

Start with the LaunchShell list

I built a curated book recommendation page from my own organized Libby export. It focuses on cybersecurity, hacker culture, networking, AI, science, and systems thinking.

Open the book recommendations