What is Abooki?
Abooki is an AI-generated short book library. It helps people create, read, and discover compact digital stories including bedtime stories, children's stories, mystery shorts, cinematic mini books, and community-created public editions.
How do I use the website?
Use Home for highlights and search, Archive for the public library, Editions for new releases, AI to generate a book, My List for saved books after signing in, and the reader page to open a full story.
How do I generate an AI book?
Open the AI page, add a title or idea, choose a genre, and generate the story. Abooki creates a short book with a title, description, cover details, and story pages. You can then read it, save it, and publish eligible books to the public library.
What kinds of books can I create?
You can create bedtime stories, children's stories, fantasy adventures, mystery stories, educational mini books, comedy shorts, cinematic trailers-style concepts, and other short-form digital reads.
How do I read a book?
Open a story from Home, Archive, Editions, or a public book detail page. The reader presents the book as a clean digital reading experience with the story pages and book controls.
How do I save a book?
Sign in or register, open a book, and use the available save or list controls where shown. Saved books are connected to your account and can appear in My List.
How can my book get featured?
Featured placement is curated. Books are more likely to be considered when they are public, complete, easy to read, have a strong title, a clear genre, a useful description, and a polished cover or trailer. Featuring is not automatic or guaranteed.
Can I publish a story publicly?
Public stories can appear in the Archive, Editions, sitemap, and book detail pages when they are available as public Abooki editions. Private account areas such as My List, Profile, Settings, and Reader are not intended as public search pages.
How does Abooki help search engines understand books?
Abooki uses crawlable public pages, descriptive titles, meta descriptions, canonical URLs, sitemaps, internal links, and structured data for the project, FAQs, collections, and public book detail pages.
Where should I start?
Start with Latest Editions to read new public stories, The Archive to browse the library, or AI to create your own short book.