Apple Books Supports Multiple Filetypes

While there’s an e-book store built into the Apple Books app, the app is an all-purpose e-book reader. You can read the common types of text files using the app, including ePub and PDF. The only major e-book format that Apple Books cannot read is the Kindle format. This flexibility is important since it gives you several options for getting things to read from multiple sources.

Downloading E-Books With the Apple Books App

The go-to place to get books is the Apple Books Store, which is integrated into the app. The home screen of the app provides useful recommendations for books you may enjoy based on what you’ve read in the past. In the book listings, you can read a sample, check reviews, or buy the book. For added convenience, you can use the credit card on file in your Apple ID to buy books. Prices on the latest bestsellers seem to be roughly identical in the Kindle and Apple Books stores. Barring sales, backlist prices are also virtually the same across the board.

The Apple Books Reading Experience

Once you have a book in the Apple Books app, the e-book reading experience is terrific. The books are displayed in full color, and the page turns are lifelike and smooth with the swipe of a finger. Books can be read in landscape mode. A link at the top takes you to the table of contents, and you can adjust the brightness or text size as well. A keyword search and bookmark are also available from the top navigation bar. You can also sort your books into collections for easy management.

One Limitation: Backlit Screens

The one major limitation Apple Books faces for reading is that it only works on iOS devices and they only offer backlit screens. When you read indoors, this doesn’t matter much. When if you read in a dimly lit room, you may prefer it.

The Bottom Line 

What You’ll Need

The Apple Books app requires iOS 10 or later. It’s compatible with the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch. Books is also available on all versions of macOS since Catalina (10.15).