Importing Kindle or iBooks into Bookpedia
Posted: Thu Nov 09, 2017 5:33 am
IMPORTANT - IF YOU ARE USING
Bookpedia Version: 5.9.3 or greater
and
Kindle Version: 1.26.1 or greater
PLEASE GOTO THIS TOPIC: Importing Kindle or iBooks into Bookpedia Part 2
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we know Bookpedia does not import Kindle books. After doing some Googling I came across a great blog article by Jan Drewniak - “From Kindle to Calibre to iBooks” which he published in January 2, 2014.
Following his set of instructions enabled me to import my Kindle library into my Bookpedia Library. I have refined his instructions and adapted them. Below are my adjusted instructions.
So the mission is to get your books from the Kindle for Mac app into Bookpedia and if you desire into iBooks as well. To do this we need a FREE third party app called Calibre. If you only have your books on your iPad or iPhone then you will need to download the Kindle for Mac app from the App Store. Then download all your books from your Kindle account cloud storage.
OK lets start!
Step 1: Locate the Kindle Data Folder
It's here: ~/Library/Containers/com.amazon.Kindle/Data/Library/Application Support/Kindle/My Kindle Content/ You can easily go to this folder by pressing Command+Shift+G in the Finder, then copying and pasting the above path into the textfield and pressing 'Go'.
Within the “My Kindle Content” folder you will see Folders and Files. The files we are interested in are .azw and .apnx files. The folders will have the ASIN number of the book suffixed by _EBOK. These _EBOK folders are the new way Kindle is filing its books. Within each folder are the two files we are interested in .azw and .apnx These are your kindle books.
Step 2: Make a Temp folder and copy
We need to make a Temp folder, you choose your location, I made mine on the Desktop. Within the “My Kindle Content” folder copy across the .azw and .apnx files. Now open each ASIN number folder in turn and copy across their .azw and .apnx files. The reason we have to copy the .azw and .apnx files to a Temp folder is that on import Calibre deletes those files. A bit naughty IMHO.
Step 3: Download Calibre
Download Calibre from its parent site.
Step 4: DeDRMing Kindle books with Calibre
Download the DeDRM plugin for Calibre. The plugin will automatically strip DRM from Kindle books when they are added to Calibre.
Now to install the plugin into Calibre:
Open calibre's Preferences dialog. Click on the "Plugins" button on the “Advanced” tool line. Next, click on the button, "Load plugin from file". Navigate to the unzipped DeDRM_tools folder and, in the folder "DeDRM_calibre_plugin", find the file "DeDRM_plugin.zip". Click to select the file and select "Open". Click "Yes" in the "Are you sure?" dialog box. Click the "OK" button in the "Success" dialog box.
Now for some Calibre house keeping
Step 5: Automatically adding books into Calibre
First we need to set the preferred output format in Calibre, then we need to set up the automatic adding. These settings should already be set but no harm in checking.
To set the preferred output format. From the top menu, we go to: Calibre → Preferences → Behavior (button on the “Interface” tool line) And there we select EPUB as the preferred output format. Now for the automatic adding. From the top menu, we go to: Calibre → Preferences → Adding Books → Automatic Adding (button on the “Adding books” tool line) From here, we select the folder that we copied the kindle books into with Automator. My folder is named "Kindle 4 Mac Items". It's important that “automatically convert added files to the current output format” is checked. We click apply. Now after we hit apply, Calibre will automatically add the kindle books, strip the DRM off them, and convert them to ePubs. You can also Drag & Drop your .azw and .apnx files onto the central listing area.
Step 7: Adding Metadata and Cover Art
Unfortunately when Calibre brings in the Kindle books it lacks some metadata and sometimes the cover art. To refresh or add metadata right click and select Edit metadata > Download metadata and covers. This will take sometime depending on you library size. Once complete you now need to convert the your library into epub format again.
Step 8: Adding Metadata and Cover Art
Highlight all the books, right click and select Convert books > Create a catalog of the books in your calibre library. In the Catalog options > Catalog format select epub. Untick Add catalog to library if ticked. Click Apply then OK. Important final step is to restart the Calibre app course I found that the metadata did not update till I did.
NOTE: Steps 7 & 8 can take some time depending upon your Calibre library size. I personally believe that Bookpedia is quicker at adding/updating metadata. To Check on the import and conversion processes click on the word Jobs bottom right of the window.
Step 9: Getting from Calibre to Bookpedia
The Quick Way: I just highlight and drag two at a time onto the Bookpedia (Bookpedia prefers small quantities at a time) icon in the Dock from Calibre’s central listing area. Bookpedia will automatically create a collection called “Imported e-books”. Unfortunately I found using this method not all the metadata comes across. Of course you can fix this within Bookpedia.
The Best Way: Is to highlight all the books, right click and select Convert books > Create a catalog of the books in your calibre library. In the Catalog options > Catalog format select CSV. Choose a Catalog title. Untick Add catalog to library if ticked. Select CSV/XML options and and make sure every box is ticked. Click Apply then OK. I store the created file on my Desktop.Now drag this csv file on to the Bookpedia icon in the Dock. A list of all Bookpedia fields will open up. You can leave most of the settings as they are except for three: #mobi = ASIN, Cover = Image URL & Pubdate = Release
Step 10: Getting from Calibre to iBooks
Importing into iBooks is just the simple method of highlighting all your books in Calibre and drag and drop onto the iBooks icon in the dock.
And that is all folks.
Bookpedia Version: 5.9.3 or greater
and
Kindle Version: 1.26.1 or greater
PLEASE GOTO THIS TOPIC: Importing Kindle or iBooks into Bookpedia Part 2
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we know Bookpedia does not import Kindle books. After doing some Googling I came across a great blog article by Jan Drewniak - “From Kindle to Calibre to iBooks” which he published in January 2, 2014.
Following his set of instructions enabled me to import my Kindle library into my Bookpedia Library. I have refined his instructions and adapted them. Below are my adjusted instructions.
So the mission is to get your books from the Kindle for Mac app into Bookpedia and if you desire into iBooks as well. To do this we need a FREE third party app called Calibre. If you only have your books on your iPad or iPhone then you will need to download the Kindle for Mac app from the App Store. Then download all your books from your Kindle account cloud storage.
OK lets start!
Step 1: Locate the Kindle Data Folder
It's here: ~/Library/Containers/com.amazon.Kindle/Data/Library/Application Support/Kindle/My Kindle Content/ You can easily go to this folder by pressing Command+Shift+G in the Finder, then copying and pasting the above path into the textfield and pressing 'Go'.
Within the “My Kindle Content” folder you will see Folders and Files. The files we are interested in are .azw and .apnx files. The folders will have the ASIN number of the book suffixed by _EBOK. These _EBOK folders are the new way Kindle is filing its books. Within each folder are the two files we are interested in .azw and .apnx These are your kindle books.
Step 2: Make a Temp folder and copy
We need to make a Temp folder, you choose your location, I made mine on the Desktop. Within the “My Kindle Content” folder copy across the .azw and .apnx files. Now open each ASIN number folder in turn and copy across their .azw and .apnx files. The reason we have to copy the .azw and .apnx files to a Temp folder is that on import Calibre deletes those files. A bit naughty IMHO.
Step 3: Download Calibre
Download Calibre from its parent site.
Step 4: DeDRMing Kindle books with Calibre
Download the DeDRM plugin for Calibre. The plugin will automatically strip DRM from Kindle books when they are added to Calibre.
Now to install the plugin into Calibre:
Open calibre's Preferences dialog. Click on the "Plugins" button on the “Advanced” tool line. Next, click on the button, "Load plugin from file". Navigate to the unzipped DeDRM_tools folder and, in the folder "DeDRM_calibre_plugin", find the file "DeDRM_plugin.zip". Click to select the file and select "Open". Click "Yes" in the "Are you sure?" dialog box. Click the "OK" button in the "Success" dialog box.
Now for some Calibre house keeping
Step 5: Automatically adding books into Calibre
First we need to set the preferred output format in Calibre, then we need to set up the automatic adding. These settings should already be set but no harm in checking.
To set the preferred output format. From the top menu, we go to: Calibre → Preferences → Behavior (button on the “Interface” tool line) And there we select EPUB as the preferred output format. Now for the automatic adding. From the top menu, we go to: Calibre → Preferences → Adding Books → Automatic Adding (button on the “Adding books” tool line) From here, we select the folder that we copied the kindle books into with Automator. My folder is named "Kindle 4 Mac Items". It's important that “automatically convert added files to the current output format” is checked. We click apply. Now after we hit apply, Calibre will automatically add the kindle books, strip the DRM off them, and convert them to ePubs. You can also Drag & Drop your .azw and .apnx files onto the central listing area.
Step 7: Adding Metadata and Cover Art
Unfortunately when Calibre brings in the Kindle books it lacks some metadata and sometimes the cover art. To refresh or add metadata right click and select Edit metadata > Download metadata and covers. This will take sometime depending on you library size. Once complete you now need to convert the your library into epub format again.
Step 8: Adding Metadata and Cover Art
Highlight all the books, right click and select Convert books > Create a catalog of the books in your calibre library. In the Catalog options > Catalog format select epub. Untick Add catalog to library if ticked. Click Apply then OK. Important final step is to restart the Calibre app course I found that the metadata did not update till I did.
NOTE: Steps 7 & 8 can take some time depending upon your Calibre library size. I personally believe that Bookpedia is quicker at adding/updating metadata. To Check on the import and conversion processes click on the word Jobs bottom right of the window.
Step 9: Getting from Calibre to Bookpedia
The Quick Way: I just highlight and drag two at a time onto the Bookpedia (Bookpedia prefers small quantities at a time) icon in the Dock from Calibre’s central listing area. Bookpedia will automatically create a collection called “Imported e-books”. Unfortunately I found using this method not all the metadata comes across. Of course you can fix this within Bookpedia.
The Best Way: Is to highlight all the books, right click and select Convert books > Create a catalog of the books in your calibre library. In the Catalog options > Catalog format select CSV. Choose a Catalog title. Untick Add catalog to library if ticked. Select CSV/XML options and and make sure every box is ticked. Click Apply then OK. I store the created file on my Desktop.Now drag this csv file on to the Bookpedia icon in the Dock. A list of all Bookpedia fields will open up. You can leave most of the settings as they are except for three: #mobi = ASIN, Cover = Image URL & Pubdate = Release
Step 10: Getting from Calibre to iBooks
Importing into iBooks is just the simple method of highlighting all your books in Calibre and drag and drop onto the iBooks icon in the dock.
And that is all folks.