Title: Integration with OpenLibrary plugin
Last modified: August 21, 2016

---

# Integration with OpenLibrary plugin

 *  [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/)
 * Interesting plugin.
 * I was wondering whether this plugin can already or is planned to be, able to 
   integrate with OpenLibary plugin. It seems this plugin is only for inputting 
   book data you have on hand.
 * I feel it’d be easier if users could search OpenLibrary, and have the book meta
   data pulled from OpenLibrary and used to prepopulate the BookReviewLibrary fields.
 * Or perhaps automate the entire process by importing a list of ISBN numbers.
 * Thanks
 * [http://wordpress.org/plugins/book-review-library/](http://wordpress.org/plugins/book-review-library/)

Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)

 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079264)
 * I haven’t looked at OpenLibrary yet, so I’m not sure what would be involved in
   pulling data from that into this plugin. This plugin was primarily written less
   to be about displaying a collection of books and more to be about a separate 
   part of your site where you can keep _reviews_ of books. I see you’ve already
   taken a look at [OpenBook Book Data](http://wordpress.org/support/plugin/openbook-book-data)
   which is probably more what you are looking for, but I’ll put OpenLibrary on 
   my radar and think about what would make sense in terms of integration with this
   plugin.
 *  Thread Starter [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079398)
 * My mistake! I meant OpenBook Data, not OpenLibrary. You’re correct.
 * I come from a Drupal background which tends to have modules that integrate with
   other similar modules to improve and extend eachother’s functionality. I’ve still
   very new to WordPress. Your plugin seems like it could be very powerful if integrated
   with the OpenBook Data (OBD) plugin.
 * Correct me if I’m wrong, but your plugin was originally designed as a “custom
   post type” of sorts?
 * I understand your plugin is for reviews, I just imagined it’d be useful to piggyback
   off of the OBD plugin to pre-populate the book meta data – ISBN, title, author,
   publisher etc. The review portion would still be up to the user to complete. 
   By prepopulating the basic book data fields, it’d make the user experience that
   much smoother.
 * This is the workflow I imagine, assuming future integration with the OBD plugin:
 * 1. user searches for book
 * 2. the search function, using the OBD plugin, would check the current site’s 
   DB to see if the book exists
 * 3. if the book does NOT exist, it’d check OpenLibrary, and if there is a match,
   display the book data/image in the search results
 * 4. from the results screen, a user could click a “add a review” button which 
   would then trigger your plugin
 * 5. the user would be directed to the”create review” screen and all book data 
   would be prefilled using data from OpenLibrary, the “review” section would be
   empty awaiting the user’s input
 * 6. alternatively, if a user does not want to add a review at that moment, but
   is just checking to see if a book has been added, the website should create a“
   placeholder” book page/post using prefilled book data from OpenLibrary that is
   stored on the site’s DB.
 * Does this make sense? I’m happy to clarify if it’s too convoluted.
 * Thanks
 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079409)
 * What you’re describing makes sense but it’s way outside the scope of what this
   plugin was intended to be (and, I suspect, what the other OpenBook Book Data 
   plutin was trying to be). One key point is that this plugin is intended for users
   to add their reviews from the back-end — e.g. they already have an account (either
   one of the default WordPress user roles that can edit Book Reviews or one of 
   the new ones added by this plugin, i.e. Librarian & Book Reviewer) and they’re
   managing content from the dashboard.
 * The user experience you describe sounds very much _front-end_, e.g. I’m browsing
   the site, I search for a book, I find it — or don’t — and I can manipulate that
   data and add a review from the front of the site, without touching the WordPress
   dashboard. That enters into territory of building new functionality for front-
   end posting, dealing with login screens and user registration, etc., which were
   never part of how this plugin was designed to function.
 * Another key point is the searching itself. Searching in WordPress is built-in,
   and searches content from all posts in the wp_posts database table. Your scenario
   prescribes a fallback search — i.e. I do a normal WordPress search, and if it
   fails to find a result, _another_ search takes place that scrapes the OpenLibrary
   database to look for a book there. Besides adding loading time by running two
   searches, I have no idea if this is even _possible_ in WordPress (specifically
   running the default WordPress search _and then_ running a completely separate
   search — most search plugins I’ve looked at in the past _replace_ the default
   WordPress search with their own search functionality) and if it is possible, 
   I don’t know how advisable it would be to do a double-search for reasons I just
   pointed out. Assuming you could do it, you’d then need to deal with _displaying_
   the search results, which are likely to come up in a completely different format
   and layout than a regular WordPress search and wouldn’t be a great user experience
   if the user was expecting the results to come out one way and they come back 
   looking completely different.
 * I looked at OpenLibrary yesterday a bit — and I’d consider integrating elements
   of it into this plugin EXCEPT that when I did book and author searches, I got
   a lot of empty results for things I was looking for. So then I thought maybe 
   I could just use it for book covers instead of having the user upload covers.
   Except that there were a lot of those missing as well — so I wouldn’t want to
   replace the uploading of book covers from my plugin and replace it with covers
   automatically fetched from their database because their database is incomplete—
   and having two different ways of doing the same thing would be confusing and 
   disruptive to the user. When I finally _did_ find some books in OpenLibrary, 
   I wasn’t overly impressed by the information they gave me. It didn’t add any 
   value to what is already handled by the Book Review Library plugin. As a user
   entering in book reviews, I’m already adding the author and the title — if I 
   was going to grab that data from somewhere else, I’d need to enter it in first
   _anyway_ or else know the ISBN off the top of my head. And if I _did_ know the
   ISBN, then I’d need to _wait_ again until the plugin was able to fetch whatever
   data it could (if it existed) from the OpenLibrary database before I could start
   writing my review. And in the time it would take to fetch that data, I could 
   already be halfway done with those tasks of adding the author and/or title, so
   I really couldn’t see any value there. If OpenLibrary had other data it stored,
   like genre or subject information, that would be something else — but I’d still
   need to develop a way to automatically add those items as taxonomy terms from
   their system into WordPress, which, again, would involve waiting for their server
   to respond and I’m not overly enthused about adding anything to the plugin that’s
   going to involve waiting for something else to reply back before the reviewer
   can do their work.
 * The other plugin is simple and streamlined — you give it an ISBN number, it queries
   specifically for that number, and displays the results. That’s something I could
   see being applicable to a wide array of people. This plugin, having been written
   specifically for a pair of librarians I was working with based on things they
   specifically requested, is similarly narrow in scope — it does a thing (in this
   case creates a review post type to allow you to write and display book reviews
   on a separate part of your website) and has the added bonus of being able to 
   pull up those reviews in a variety of different ways since all the sortable elements(
   author, subject, genre, even rating) are set up as taxonomies, so you can pull
   up all the items with the same term, like all books with a five star rating.
 * Pulling in complex functionality from a third party service would be a great 
   idea for a particular project, but not something I imagine would be of widespread
   appeal. _I_ would use the book review library (if, you know, I had time to write
   a bunch of book reviews 🙂 ), I don’t know that I would want to have to wait 
   for data to be returned from a third party service only to find it didn’t have
   what I was looking for anyway before I could write my review. It’s possible that
   I’m completely wrong and there are people out there who share your desire and
   are dying for this feature. To me, though, that’s for another plugin or for a
   specific site/project, not really for this one.
 * The last thing I want to say is that I spent a lot of time developing this plugin.
   The only reason I put it on WordPress.org instead of trying to sell it and make
   it worth the time it took to develop was because I really didn’t want to have
   to spend _more time_ dealing with figuring out pricing models and support and
   all that. It was just quicker and easier and less hassle to put it up for free.
   And I was doing it for a specific project/site that I maintain, so there’s that.
   While I wouldn’t necessarily be opposed to looking into adding complexity or 
   building an add-on plugin to this that added the types of things you’re looking
   for, I’m really not inclined to spend a lot more time making massive, massive
   changes to this plugin after having already spent so much time developing it 
   in the first place. But if you would be interested in sponsoring development 
   for what you are looking for, feel free to [contact me off the forums](http://arcanepalette.com/contact-us/)
   and we can talk about it.
 *  Thread Starter [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079416)
 * Thanks for taking the time to make this detailed response, Chris. It cleared 
   up a lot of things.
 * You noted that this plugin requires data input via the WP dashboard. I’m not 
   entirely opposed to this approach, I just wonder if it’s possible to use this
   plugin with a free off-the-shelf theme that could make the “create review” process
   less “dashboard-looking,” ideally restricting the access to only one task – create
   the review. With that said, is it possible for this plugin to support with one
   of the various “form plugins” to provide a more basic user/one-task experience
   as opposed to a site-admin/multi-task experience?
 * The search issue, as you explained it, is very likely and is is something I’ll
   have to investigate further. Two searches would be resource intensive and laggy,
   hampering the user experience. Mind you, I wouldn’t limit the search to by-ISBN
   only, it’d be more practical if a user can search on any book facet – ISBN, author,
   title, publisher, subject, genre etc. I’m not sure if that would be more efficient
   on the back-end and for the user.
 * I hadn’t actually tried the OBD/OpenLibrary plugin yet as I’m still researching,
   but it’s interesting to hear your experience that it’s database isn’t as fleshed
   out as I had assumed it to be. I’ll have to look into that too.
 * Thanks for clarifying things. Your feedback as put things into perspective. My
   experience is with Drupal, thus I still have a very Drupal-centric view on things.
   I’m learning more and more about WP, and you’ve helped.
 * I think my next steps will be to investigate whether there are plugins to allow
   me to hack plugins to play nicely together to get the functionality I need. I’m
   not sure if you can help me with this, but do you have any recommendations of
   plugins that would support rule-based actions plugins or prepopulating-field 
   plugins?
 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079422)
 * > …I just wonder if it’s possible to use this plugin with a free off-the-shelf
   > theme that could make the “create review” process less “dashboard-looking,”
   > ideally restricting the access to only one task – create the review.
 * Off-the-shelf? Not likely. At minimum, you’d need to give users the ability to
   create posts, which requires login/authentication, and usually that isn’t built
   into a theme. Plugins, maybe, and there are a number of plugins that will let
   your users sign in without showing them the dashboard.
 * That’s fine and dandy, but the second part of this equation is giving users the
   ability to create/edit reviews without touching the back-end. Since book reviews
   are not a standard post type, even if there was a solution out there, it would
   need to work with custom post types. It’s possible (I haven’t checked lately)
   that Gravity Forms may offer this. And, for what it’s worth, it’s not _that hard_
   to build a template that allows front-end post editing, it just, you know, needs
   to be coded.
 * On the upside, though, the Book Reviewer and Librarian user roles of this plugin
   don’t give users assigned to those roles full access to the rest of the dashboard.
   Librarians can create and publish posts and pages but only their own (in addition
   to having full access over book review posts, their own or otherwise). Book Reviewers
   can publish posts but not pages and only have access to edit their own stuff (
   reviews or posts). So, by using those new roles added by the Book Review Library
   plugin, you are limiting the user in what they are able to do as opposed to giving
   them a full Admin account (which I am generally opposed to as a rule).
 * > Mind you, I wouldn’t limit the search to by-ISBN only, it’d be more practical
   > if a user can search on any book facet – ISBN, author, title, publisher, subject,
   > genre etc.
 * Right, I used that as an example because that’s one thing that I don’t have in
   this plugin and that’s the easiest way to pull up information about a specific
   book. I was thinking from a reviewer perspective, okay, I’m going to write a 
   review, I could do a search by book author, Or I could just tick the box (if 
   it has already been created in the Book Review Library plugin) or make a new 
   one. It takes just as much time to type out the name and create a new author 
   as it would to type out the name and run a search, so that’s not practical. Same
   with any of the other fields. So if there were any actual _value_ added by pulling
   up an entry from OpenLibrary by ISBN, then, as a developer, I’d consider adding
   it. But I just didn’t see a whole lot there when I played around in their database…
   not anything I could easily use and integrate, at least.
 * Keep in mind that when I’m talking about OpenLibrary, I’m not referring to the
   [OpenBook Book Data](http://wordpress.org/support/plugin/openbook-book-data) 
   WordPress plugin that hooks into their system. His plugin is just another plugin
   and it pulls data from [OpenLibrary](http://openlibrary.org/) and I’m guessing
   if you were using his plugin, and you gave it the ISBN of a book it didn’t have
   like 9780470916223, which pulls up a not found result on OpenLibrary but is the
   ISBN for [this](http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?keywords=9780470916223+Brad+Williams%3BOzh+Richard%3BJustin+Tadlock+Professional+WordPress+Plugin+Development&tag=collectorzconnect-20&index=books),
   you’d get a similar result, a shortcode that just doesn’t return any information.
   For _his_ plugin, that’s less of a problem. Because you’re using a shortcode,
   which means you’re probably entering it into a post or a page. So if you find
   an ISBN or an author that doesn’t exist in their database, it isn’t a huge issue,
   you just don’t include that extra information. Nothing is really hurt. But making
   it a core component of _this_ or any other plugin, in which you are fetching 
   data to fill in the blanks and you’re doing it in such a way that you’d want 
   to do a check/search _before_ doing your work means that there isn’t much wiggle
   room if the service you’re using is lacking entries — as soon as you pull a negative
   search result, you’ve just wasted the user’s time.
 * > do you have any recommendations of plugins that would support rule-based actions
   > plugins or prepopulating-field plugins?
 * There are a couple things I can think of off the top of my head. They may not
   be for every situation, but it could give you a head start. Like I said, I’m 
   pretty sure you can set up [Gravity Forms](http://www.gravityforms.com/) to post
   data submitted via a form as an actual post. I’m not sure if it supports custom
   post types or not. Unfortunately, Gravity Forms isn’t free, so you can’t just
   play with it and find out (though they do have a demo), but if you’re doing anything
   in WordPress, it’s worth looking at anyway, because it’s a fantastic plugin. 
   Gravity Forms also includes conditional logic in their forms, so if these fields
   are filled out, show this other field or these other options. It’s one of the
   few contact form plugins I’ve seen for WordPress that do that, and that’s a big
   bonus.
 * [Ninja Forms](http://wordpress.org/plugins/ninja-forms/) is another plugin that
   can do conditional logic. The base plugin is free, but the [conditional logic](http://wpninjas.com/downloads/conditional-logic/)
   component is an add-on that you purchase from their site. The also have a separate
   add-on that enables [front-end posting](http://wpninjas.com/downloads/front-end-posting/),
   which does support custom post types. So, those two things combined could be 
   really powerful.
 * And then a peripherally-related plugin that I know of off the top of my head 
   is [Widget Logic](http://wordpress.org/plugins/widget-logic/) — this adds php
   if/else logic to display (or hide) sidebar widgets, which is related to your 
   rule-based actions thing. But then, that’s probably not something you’d really
   use straight off, since widgets aren’t what you’re trying to manipulate, and 
   if you’re using it to dig through the code, you might as well just write your
   own plugin. 🙂
 * The thing is, you’re not just prepopulating fields, you’re fetching it from a
   third party source, and that’s a whole different can of worms and comes along
   with a hefty dose of necessary transaction time as your script reaches out to
   ping the service you’re using and wait for a response. If it came down to it,
   and you’re trying to get book data (or anything else) it may be more worth your
   while to see if you can get that information from some other resource — for example,
   it used to be possible (it’s been a while since I looked) to set up an Amazon
   developer account and use an API key to fetch things like product images (e.g.
   book covers) — I don’t know their current API and developer resources well enough
   these days but in theory it seems like if you could do that, you may be able 
   to get other information (genre, subjects, ISBN, description) and Amazon’s servers
   are probably among the fastest you’d ever need to use.
 *  Thread Starter [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079461)
 * Many valid points, Chris.
 * I think I’ve figured out a plan of attack. I’ll just need to find out whether
   WP can support it with free plugins and without much custom coding.
 * – Create book post type
    – Create review post type – Make an association between
   book and review post time – Display links to reviews on associated book page
 * – Make search both search internal DB and OpenLibrary using some sort of rule-
   based control
    – Automate creation of book post using data from OpenLibrary or
   support manual creation of books by users
 * – Make all book meta data fields searchable
 * With this said, I’m guessing your plugin will support the first two readily –
   book and review post type with relationship, correct?
 * In regards to form plugins you suggested, will they allow me to use them to create
   a book/review post using a form (front-end vs dashboard)?
 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079463)
 * > In regards to form plugins you suggested, will they allow me to use them to
   > create a book/review post using a form (front-end vs dashboard)?
 * Both Gravity Forms and Ninja Forms (with the front-end posting extension) can
   do this. Both are premium plugins which means you need to pay for a support license
   to get a copy, but I’d recommend either as they’re both great plugins.
 * And yes, Book Review Library creates the book review post type and various relationships
   based on genre, author, and other fields.
 *  Thread Starter [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079485)
 * Gotcha.
 * Along the topic of using a form plugin, can they (Ninja and Gravity) be used 
   to create a form (add book or review) to interface with this plugin, ie. avoiding
   the dashboard?
 * For a free form plugin alternative, do you have experience with [Form Maker](http://wordpress.org/plugins/form-maker/screenshots/)?
   Would it provide the same functionality as the other two?
 * Also, based on looking at the screenshots provided with the plugin, it appears
   the other fields – genre, author etc. – are predefined and fixed. Is that the
   case? I ask because I’d like to add additional fields related to book and book
   review, such as location.
 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079487)
 * > can they (Ninja and Gravity) be used to create a form (add book or review) 
   > to interface with this plugin, ie. avoiding the dashboard?
 * A form to create a form? I doubt it. Because of the variables involved, that’s
   probably something that can only be done on the back-end.
 * > For a free form plugin alternative, do you have experience with Form Maker?
   > Would it provide the same functionality as the other two?
 * I’m not familiar with that plugin, but from glancing at the description, it doesn’t
   look like you can use it to post content from the front end, so you wouldn’t 
   be able to use that to post book reviews.
 * > Also, based on looking at the screenshots provided with the plugin, it appears
   > the other fields – genre, author etc. – are predefined and fixed. Is that the
   > case? I ask because I’d like to add additional fields related to book and book
   > review, such as location.
 * Yes. You could add your own taxonomies (like location) and set them to interact
   with book reviews but you’d need to also develop a solution for displaying them.
 *  Thread Starter [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079514)
 * So there is no way to use a form plugin to create posts ie. mapping form fields
   to create post form fields?
 * I ask, because when you mentioned that this plugin creates book review posts 
   via the dashboard, it started to get me a little concerned with the user experience
   and thus wondering if a non-dashboard form would be better.
 * Thanks again
 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079515)
 * > So there is no way to use a form plugin to create posts ie. mapping form fields
   > to create post form fields?
 * As far as I know, there is no pre-made plugin that will be a 1:1 map with all
   of the available fields for a _custom_ post type (like book reviews). Which means,
   you could put the main review _body_ on the front end, but other things that 
   are handled by custom taxonomies (like author, genre, etc) would probably not
   be available to the person submitting the review on the front end. To do that,
   and have all the right fields available, you’d need to build a custom front-end
   posting plugin or it would need to be integrated into the plugin.
 * I’m not necessarily even opposed to building a shortcode that could be used to
   create reviews on the front end, but it would take time to build and it would
   still only be available to people with a registered account on the site (visitors
   and users without posting access shouldn’t have the ability to add posts for 
   security reasons).
 *  Thread Starter [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079517)
 * Good points.
 * I think I’ve come across some possible non-custom approaches for form-to-post
   functionality. It seems my best approach would be create a custom “book” and “
   review” post type using the “Types” plugin and then [this](http://wordpress.org/plugins/gravity-forms-custom-post-types/)
   plugin (or something similar) to make the form-to-post connection.
 * I will have to investigate further, but it’s a pity that I’m somewhat reinventing
   the wheel since your plugin readily offers much of the functionality (book- and
   review-wise).
 * I’ve yet to check this myself, but to save some time, with your plugin, does 
   it create a parent-child relationship between the book and review post types?
   And does it support multiple reviews for a single book?
 * Thanks again
 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079519)
 * there aren’t separate post types for book & review. It’s just one post type, 
   book-review. So…no. 🙂
 *  Thread Starter [WomperScomper](https://wordpress.org/support/users/womperscomper/)
 * (@womperscomper)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079520)
 * Okay, thanks. That clears up a lot and made my decision much easier. Thanks for
   taking the time to explain this stuff for me.
 *  Plugin Author [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * (@jazzs3quence)
 * [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079521)
 * NP. 🙂

Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)

The topic ‘Integration with OpenLibrary plugin’ is closed to new replies.

 * ![](https://s.w.org/plugins/geopattern-icon/book-review-library_ffffff.svg)
 * [Book Review Library](https://wordpress.org/plugins/book-review-library/)
 * [Frequently Asked Questions](https://wordpress.org/plugins/book-review-library/#faq)
 * [Support Threads](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/book-review-library/)
 * [Active Topics](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/book-review-library/active/)
 * [Unresolved Topics](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/book-review-library/unresolved/)
 * [Reviews](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/book-review-library/reviews/)

## Tags

 * [auto create](https://wordpress.org/support/topic-tag/auto-create/)
 * [ISBN](https://wordpress.org/support/topic-tag/isbn/)

 * 15 replies
 * 2 participants
 * Last reply from: [Chris Reynolds](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jazzs3quence/)
 * Last activity: [12 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/integration-with-openlibrary-plugin/#post-4079521)
 * Status: not a support question