[Faith-Talk] accessible Christian books and study materials

caota4 at gmail.com caota4 at gmail.com
Thu Oct 24 13:36:23 UTC 2024


Hi, Ashley,  Bookshare will be a great source for you.  You can download
books and read them several ways.  I don't know what assistive tech you
have, but there's a  Bookshare app for the phone, you can read them on
devices like the BrailleSense.  I suppose you can read them on your PC, too,
just don't like to do that personally so have never done that.  There are
tons of Christian books on Bookshare.  If you are a Hadley student, you can
get a free subscription, also, state of the NLS state libraries provide free
subscriptions as well, and, of course, you can purchase your own
subscription, too, they'll just ask you proof of your disability and your
regional library will provide that to Bookshare for you.

God bless,
Charlene

-----Original Message-----
From: Faith-Talk <faith-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Ashley
Bramlett via Faith-Talk
Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2024 12:51 AM
To: 'Faith-talk, for the discussion of Blindness in faith and religion'
<faith-talk at nfbnet.org>
Cc: bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Subject: [Faith-Talk] accessible Christian books and study materials

Hi all,

I wish there were more Christian materials out there. 

I use the NLS service a lot and also what is now Learning Ally. The human
read professional books from NLS have been a blessing filling much of my
reading needs in many genres except for religious studies.

 

I prefer to read by braille or human read audio books. 

While I can access electronic books on my pc, its harder for me to process
and understand the synthesized speech of it although I do use a screen
reader. I do much better with audio books by humans.

 

I know Lutheran Braille Workers has two versions of the bible in hard copy
braille as well as some study materials and devotionals.

 

Are there any other large sources of materials? I'm Methodist but any source
for the Protestant Christian faith would work. 

 

There have been some bible studies at church that I wanted to go to but did
not have the book.

Accessible materials are hard to find.

 

Maybe once I get bookshare started, someone can give me pointers on
downloading the books and how to read them online.

I have done research to find what I need searching mainstream sources such
as several public library catalogs as well as checking if they are in the
library's audio book app called Libby which was Overdrive.

I also searched Amazon and bookstore sites to see if an audio format was
available since sighted people like listening more and more now a days. 

With the availability of audio for the general public, this helps us access
more and more books.

 

Still several books are not available despite checking around.

Fortunately, I found an audio copy of some of them at the public library. I
also found one on Amazon which I bought. It was in old fashioned cd format!
So it was nice and easy to use. No need to download and unzip files or
navigate a complex website!

 

I just finished a bible study with the book Context by Josh Scott. It was a
thoughtful book about putting verses in their context.

 

Thanks for any advice.

 

Ashley

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