BookWyrm is a platform for social reading! You can use it to track what you're reading, review books, and follow your friends. It isn't primarily meant for cataloguing or as a datasource for books, but it does do both of those things to some degree.
BookWyrm is built on [ActivityPub](http://activitypub.rocks/). With ActivityPub, it inter-operates with different instances of BookWyrm, and other ActivityPub compliant services, like Mastodon and Pixelfed. This means you can run an instance for your book club, and still follow your friend who posts on a server devoted to 20th century Russian speculative fiction. It also means that your friend on mastodon can read and comment on a book review that you post on your BookWyrm instance.
Federation makes it possible to have small, self-determining communities, in contrast to the monolithic service you find on GoodReads or Twitter. An instance can be focused on a particular type of literature, be just for use by people who are in a book club together, or anything else that brings people together. Each community can choose which other instances they want to federate with, and moderate and run their community autonomously. Check out https://runyourown.social/ to get a sense of the philosophy and logistics behind small, high-trust social networks.
Since the project is still in its early stages, not everything here is fully implemented. There is plenty of room for suggestions and ideas. Open an [issue](https://github.com/mouse-reeve/bookwyrm/issues) to get the conversation going!
All the url routing is in `bookwyrm/urls.py`. This includes the application views (your home page, user page, book page, etc), application endpoints (things that happen when you click buttons), and federation api endpoints (inboxes, outboxes, webfinger, etc).
The application views and actions are in `bookwyrm/views.py`. The internal actions call api handlers which deal with federating content. Outgoing messages (any action done by a user that is federated out), as well as outboxes, live in `bookwyrm/outgoing.py`, and all handlers for incoming messages, as well as inboxes and webfinger, live in `bookwyrm/incoming.py`. Connection to openlibrary.org to get book data is handled in `bookwyrm/connectors/openlibrary.py`. ActivityPub serialization is handled in the `bookwyrm/activitypub/` directory.
The UI is all django templates because that is the default. You can replace it with a complex javascript framework over my ~dead body~ mild objections.
The application is set up to get book data from arbitrary outside sources -- right now, it's only able to connect to OpenLibrary, but other connectors could be written. By default, a book is non-canonical copy of an OpenLibrary book, and will be updated with OpenLibrary if the data there changes. However, a book can edited and decoupled from its original data source, or added locally with no external data source.
-`Book`, an abstract, high-level concept that could mean either a `Work` or an `Edition`. No data is saved as a `Book`, it serves as shared model for `Work` and `Edition`
-`Work`, the theoretical umbrella concept of a book that encompasses every edition of the book, and
-`Edition`, a concrete, actually published version of a book
Whenever a user interacts with a book, they are interacting with a specific edition. Every work has a default edition, but the user can select other editions. Reviews aggregated for all editions of a work when you view an edition's page.
There are many ways you can contribute to this project! You are welcome and encouraged to create or contribute an issue to report a bug, request a feature, make a usability suggestion, or express a nebulous desire.
If you'd like to add to the codebase, that's super rad and you should do it! At this point, there isn't a formalized process, but you can take a look at the open issues, or contact me directly and chat about it.