Forewords

Forewords vs Bookly

An honest comparison from the person who built the alternative.

I’m the creator of Forewords — so yes, I have a bias. But this comparison is a strange one to write, because Bookly and Forewords don't have a huge overlap. One helps you read more. The other helps you discover what to read. Bookly is aimed at people who want to build a reading habit. Forewords is aimed at people who read a lot already. What follows is my honest take on where each app clearly excels, where it falls short, and why the best answer might be “use both.”

JR

Jayson Robinson

Creator of Forewords · Last updated April 2026

Key takeaways

  • Choose Bookly if you want a reading timer, habit-building tools with streaks and goals, reading speed tracking, and ambient sounds to help you focus.
  • Choose Forewords if you want AI recommendations that learn your taste, flexible library organisation, a generous free tier, and a modern dark-first design.
  • Use both — honestly, this is what I’d recommend. Bookly for the reading habit, Forewords for discovery. They solve different problems with almost zero overlap.

The 60-Second Verdict

Bookly is a reading habit machine. If your problem is “I don’t read enough” and you want tools to build consistency — a timer, streaks, goals, ambient sounds, session-level stats — Bookly is excellent at that. It’s the best reading timer app I’ve used.

Forewords is a discovery engine. If your problem is “I don’t know what to read next” and you want AI recommendations that actually learn your taste, flexible library organisation, and deep reading analytics, that’s what Forewords is built for. You also get a generous free tier and a lower premium price ($18/year vs $29.99/year).

The honest take: these apps barely overlap. Bookly doesn’t have meaningful recommendations. Forewords doesn’t have a reading timer. The biggest gap for Forewords is platform support — it’s Android-only until mid-2026, while Bookly covers both iOS and Android.

4

Bookly wins

6

Forewords wins

3

Tie

Head-to-Head Comparison

Every category, side by side. Honest verdicts.

CategoryBooklyForewordsWinner
Reading timerBest-in-class — core feature with session loggingNoneBookly
AI recommendationsBloo chatbot — basic, conversationalEmbeddings + LLM — learns your actual tasteForewords
Habit buildingStreaks, daily/monthly/yearly goals, ambient soundsNo habit-building toolsBookly
Reading statsDetailed per-session stats, reading speed, finish predictionsLibrary-wide trends, genre breakdowns, taste fingerprint, AI insightsTie
Reading speed trackingYes — pages per minute, WPM, finish date predictionsNoBookly
Price (premium)Bookly Pro: $29.99/yearForewords Plus: $18/yearForewords
Free tierHeavily restricted — feels like a demoGenerous — unlimited tracking, stats, 100 AI creditsForewords
Library organisationBasic shelves and collectionsCustom shelves with tag rules, flexible filteringForewords
DNF trackingNoYes — with reasons and notesForewords
Social featuresNoneNoneTie
Dark modeYesAlways dark — it’s the entire aestheticTie
PlatformsiOS and AndroidAndroid only (iOS mid-2026)Bookly
Goodreads importPaid tier onlyFree — OAuth + CSV + any spreadsheetForewords

At a Glance

Bookly

23:41

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5-day streak

Forewords

Recommended for you

“Because you loved the unreliable narrators in...”

Your library

The Core Difference

Different problems

I need to say this upfront: Bookly and Forewords aren’t really competitors. They answer fundamentally different questions. Bookly answers ‘How do I read more?’ Forewords answers ‘What should I read next?’

Bookly’s entire design revolves around the reading timer. You start a session, you read, you stop, you log your pages. Over time it calculates your reading speed, predicts when you’ll finish a book, and tracks your progress against daily, monthly, and yearly goals. It even has ambient sounds — rain, café noise, fireplace — to help you settle into a session. It’s a habit-building machine, and a good one.

Forewords has none of that. No timer, no streaks, no ambient sounds, no reading speed. What Forewords does instead is learn what you like. You rate books, and the AI recommendation engine maps your taste into a high-dimensional space using embeddings and LLM reasoning. It figures out that you love unreliable narrators, slow-burn character arcs, and morally grey protagonists — not just that you like ‘fantasy.’ Then it finds books that match those specific patterns.

So the question isn’t really ‘which is better’ — it’s ‘what problem are you trying to solve?’ And honestly, for a lot of readers, the answer might be both.

Reading Timer & Habit Building

Bookly wins

This is Bookly’s home turf and I’m not going to pretend Forewords competes here, because it doesn’t. When I used Bookly, the reading timer impressed me immediately. You tap start, read your book, tap stop, log the pages you reached. Simple. But the magic is in what Bookly does with that data. They’ve nailed this.

Over multiple sessions, Bookly calculates your reading speed in pages per minute, estimates how long it’ll take to finish your current book, and tracks your progress against configurable goals — daily minutes, monthly pages, yearly book counts. The streak system adds gentle accountability. The ambient sound library (rain on a window, crackling fireplace, café ambience) is a small touch that actually helps some readers focus. I know people who open Bookly just for the ambient sounds.

Bookly also has a ‘Book Characters’ feature for tracking character relationships — useful if you’re reading epic fantasy with 50 named characters and you’ve forgotten who is allied with whom.

Forewords has absolutely nothing in this category. No timer, no speed tracking, no goals, no streaks, no ambient sounds. I don’t have plans to add a reading timer because I think Bookly already does it well, and I’d rather focus on what Forewords does differently. If you need a reading timer, Bookly is the answer.

Book Discovery & Recommendations

Forewords wins

This is why Forewords exists, and it’s the category where the gap is widest. Bookly has Bloo — an AI chatbot you can talk to about books and ask for suggestions. It’s conversational and can give you reasonable recommendations if you describe what you’re looking for. From what I’ve seen, it’s essentially a chat interface on top of a language model. As far as I can tell, it doesn’t learn from your library, it doesn’t analyse your ratings over time, and it doesn’t build a persistent model of your taste.

Forewords’s recommendation engine is architecturally different. Every book you rate gets mapped into a high-dimensional embedding space. The system doesn’t just know you rated a book 4 stars — it understands the book’s themes, narrative style, pacing, and emotional arc, and it triangulates those against everything else in your library. Combined with LLM reasoning, it generates recommendations with explanations: ‘Because you loved the unreliable narrator in X and the slow-burn character development in Y, you might connect with Z.’

I’ll be honest about the limitation: Forewords’s AI needs data. If you’ve rated fewer than 15 books, the recommendations will be decent but not magical. Once you’re past 30 rated books, it starts surfacing the kind of surprising, niche picks that you can’t get from any chatbot or bestseller list. That’s the sweet spot.

If discovery is a nice-to-have for you and you mainly want a reading timer, Bookly’s Bloo chatbot might be enough. But if you’re the kind of reader who’s always chasing the next great book — especially if you’ve already read the obvious picks in your genres — Forewords’s engine is in a different league.

Reading Stats

Depends on what you track

Bookly and Forewords both have strong stats, but they measure completely different things. This is one of those categories where ‘winner’ depends entirely on what matters to you.

Bookly excels at per-session statistics. Because it tracks every reading session with a timer, it can tell you your reading speed, how many minutes you read today, your average session length, how many pages you read this week, and your projected finish date for your current book. If you’re trying to build a reading habit and need to see that daily progress, Bookly’s stats are motivating and precise.

Forewords takes a library-wide view. You get books read over time, pages read, monthly trends, genre breakdowns, fiction vs non-fiction splits, and a taste fingerprint that shows what themes and qualities you gravitate toward. Forewords Plus adds AI-generated reader insights — connections between your favourites, patterns in what resonates with you, and analysis of how your taste has evolved. Forewords doesn’t track individual sessions, so it can’t tell you how fast you read or how long you spent today.

If you want ‘How am I reading?’ stats — speed, time, consistency — Bookly wins. If you want ‘What am I reading?’ stats — patterns, taste evolution, genre insights — Forewords wins. Different data, different purposes.

Pricing & Free Tier

Forewords wins

Bookly Pro costs $29.99/year. Forewords Plus costs $18/year. On raw price, Forewords is 40% cheaper. But the bigger difference is what you get for free.

Bookly’s free tier is, frankly, restrictive. It feels designed to push you toward Pro rather than give you a fully usable experience. Core features like Goodreads import, detailed statistics, and many customisation options are locked behind the paywall. I’ve seen users describe the free version as ‘basically a demo,’ and that matches my experience too.

Forewords’s free plan includes unlimited book tracking, full library organisation with custom shelves and tag rules, complete reading stats, DNF tracking with reasons, notes with voice dictation, and 100 AI recommendation credits — enough for months of discovery. No time limit, no credit card required. The free plan is usable long-term.

Forewords Plus at $18/year includes 2,000 AI recommendation credits, advanced reader insights, and priority features. But the key difference is that Forewords’s free tier doesn’t feel crippled. You can use Forewords indefinitely without paying and still get real value. I can’t honestly say the same about Bookly’s free tier.

To be completely transparent: my long-term goal is to make everything free, funded by affiliate revenue from book purchases. The Plus tier exists primarily as a safeguard against AI credit overconsumption while that business model matures. At $18/year the price is deliberately kept at a ‘no brainer’ level — it’s not designed to be a meaningful revenue driver.

Can You Use Both?

Recommended

This is the section I actually want you to read. Bookly and Forewords are more complementary than they are alternatives. They barely overlap.

Bookly is your reading companion — the app you open when you sit down to read. Start the timer, settle into the ambient sounds, track your session, log your pages, watch your streak grow. It makes the act of reading more intentional and measurable.

Forewords is your reading advisor — the app you open when you’ve just finished a book and want to know what to pick up next. Browse your AI recommendations, explore why a particular book might resonate with you, check your taste fingerprint to see how your reading patterns are evolving.

Using both costs $48/year combined ($30 for Bookly Pro + $18 for Forewords Plus), or you could use Bookly Pro with Forewords’s free tier for $30/year and still get 100 AI recommendation credits per month. Either way, you’d have a reading timer that actually works and a discovery engine that actually learns.

In my opinion, the combination is stronger than either app alone. I built Forewords because I couldn’t find good AI recommendations anywhere — not because I had a problem with reading timers. If Bookly helps you read more, and Forewords helps you read better things, that’s a pretty good stack.

Who Should Pick What

You want to build a daily reading habit with accountability

BooklyThe reading timer, streaks, and goal tracking are exactly what you need. Bookly turns reading into a measurable habit with real momentum.

You read on iPhone and want a reading tracker now

BooklyForewords is Android-only until mid-2026. If you’re on iOS, Bookly is the only option of the two.

You want to know your reading speed and when you’ll finish a book

BooklyPer-session timing, pages-per-minute calculations, and finish date predictions are Bookly’s core strengths. Forewords doesn’t track any of this.

You’ve read all the obvious books in your genre and want surprising new picks

ForewordsForewords’s AI learns your specific taste patterns — not just genres, but themes, narrative styles, and character types. The more you rate, the more unexpected and accurate the recommendations get.

You want a powerful free tier without feeling pushed to upgrade

ForewordsUnlimited book tracking, full library organisation, complete reading stats, and 100 AI credits — all free, no time limit. Bookly’s free tier is restrictive by comparison.

You want detailed library stats and AI-powered reading insights

ForewordsGenre breakdowns, taste fingerprint, monthly trends, and AI-generated insights about your reading patterns. Forewords analyses your library; Bookly analyses your sessions.

You want the best of both worlds

Use bothBookly for the reading timer and habit building. Forewords for AI discovery and library analytics. They solve different problems with almost zero overlap. Combined cost is $48/year for both premium tiers, or use Forewords’s free tier with Bookly Pro for $30/year.

Final scoreboard

Across 13 head-to-head categories: 6 Forewords wins / 3 ties / 4 Bookly wins. Bookly edges ahead on the reading timer, habit infrastructure, reading-speed tracking, and platform breadth. Forewords edges ahead on AI recommendations, library structure, free-tier generosity, and import UX. They solve different problems — many readers use both.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Bookly or Forewords better for tracking reading habits?

Bookly is the clear winner for habit tracking. Its core mechanic is a reading timer with session logging, reading speed calculation, daily/monthly/yearly goal tracking, and streaks. Forewords has no reading timer or habit-building tools at all — it’s focused on book discovery and library organisation instead. If building a consistent reading habit is your primary goal, Bookly is the better choice.

Can I use Bookly and Forewords together?

Yes, and I’d honestly recommend it. They solve completely different problems. Use Bookly to track your reading sessions, build streaks, and measure your reading speed. Use Forewords to discover what to read next with AI recommendations that learn your taste. There’s very little overlap between the two apps.

Is Bookly free?

Bookly has a free tier, but it’s heavily restricted — it feels more like a demo than a usable free plan. Most useful features (including Goodreads import, detailed statistics, and unlimited book tracking) require Bookly Pro at $29.99/year. Forewords’s free plan includes unlimited book tracking, full library organisation, reading stats, and 100 AI recommendation credits.

How much does Bookly Pro cost compared to Forewords Plus?

Bookly Pro is $29.99/year. Forewords Plus is $18/year — 40% cheaper. But they offer very different things: Bookly Pro opens up the reading timer’s full feature set, while Forewords Plus includes 2,000 AI recommendation credits and advanced reader insights. The better question is which features matter more to you.

Does Bookly have AI recommendations?

Bookly has Bloo, an AI chatbot you can ask for book suggestions. It’s conversational and can give basic recommendations, but from what I’ve seen, it doesn’t learn your taste over time the way Forewords’s engine does. Forewords uses embeddings-based matching combined with LLM reasoning to understand your specific preferences — themes, narrative styles, pacing — and gets more accurate as you rate more books.

Does Forewords have a reading timer?

No. Forewords has no reading timer, no session tracking, and no reading speed calculation. This is Bookly’s core strength and Forewords doesn’t try to compete there. Forewords focuses on what to read (AI-powered discovery) rather than how to read more (habit building).

Which app works on iPhone?

Bookly works on both iOS and Android. Forewords is currently Android-only, with iOS launching mid-2026. If you’re on iPhone, Bookly is the only option of the two right now.

Does Bookly have a web app?

No, Bookly is mobile-only (iOS and Android). Forewords is also mobile-only (Android, with iOS coming mid-2026). Neither app offers a web experience. You can manage your Forewords account and import your library via the website, but the core app experience is mobile for both.

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This comparison was written by Jayson Robinson, creator of Forewords. I’ve done my best to be accurate and fair, but I obviously have a bias toward my own product. All pricing and feature information was verified in April 2026 and may change. If you spot an error, let me know.

Looking for a broader comparison? See our full comparison of book tracker apps.