Listening to Aozora Bunko — a complete guide from download to playback
How to use Yomite's built-in Aozora Bunko reader. Search, download, favourites, voice picking — turn Sōseki, Dazai, Akutagawa, and Miyazawa Kenji into audiobooks.
Aozora Bunko is Japan’s biggest free digital library — out-of-copyright works including Natsume Sōseki, Dazai Osamu, Akutagawa Ryūnosuke, Miyazawa Kenji, Higuchi Ichiyō, and thousands more. All free.
Yomite ships with Aozora Bunko built in — search, browse, save, and read aloud, all without leaving the app. Here’s the full tour.
Step 1 — Open the Aozora tab
Launch Yomite → tap the “青空文庫” (Aozora Bunko) tab in the bottom navigation. On first run, the app downloads the index (a few MB). After that, search works offline.
Step 2 — Find a work
Three ways to look:
- By author — type “夏目漱石” or “Natsume Sōseki”, “太宰治”
- By title — “走れメロス” (Run, Melos!), “坊っちゃん” (Botchan), “銀河鉄道の夜” (Night on the Galactic Railroad)
- By length — short / medium / long, plus genre filters
Good short-story starting points: Dazai’s “Run, Melos!”, Akutagawa’s “Rashōmon” or “The Spider’s Thread”, Miyazawa’s “The Restaurant of Many Orders”.
Step 3 — Download the text
Tap a work → “Download”. The body text saves to your device and works offline from then on.
Most Aozora texts are 100–500 KB. Downloads finish in seconds. The text includes furigana (kana reading guides), and Yomite respects them when reading aloud.
Step 4 — Pick a voice
This is where it gets fun.
Casting suggestions
- Sōseki, Botchan → 中2 / にせ — young first-person energy
- Sōseki, Kokoro → 阿井田 茂 — calm reflective recollection
- Dazai, Run, Melos! → 阿井田 茂 with “Shout” style for the climax
- Dazai, No Longer Human → まい / 天深シノ — introspective monologue
- Akutagawa, Rashōmon → 阿井田 茂 — gravitas for the framing prose
- Akutagawa, The Spider’s Thread → 凛音エル / 花音 — mysterious atmosphere
- Miyazawa, Night on the Galactic Railroad → 桜音 / みちのくあいり — gentle children’s-story register
- Miyazawa, The Restaurant of Many Orders → 中2 — quick comedic tempo
- Higuchi Ichiyō, Takekurabe → 花音 — refined Meiji-era prose
Hearing a familiar classic in a new voice can completely reshape your reading.
Step 5 — Play
Hit play. First-sentence synthesis takes 1–2 seconds; after that, streaming inference hides all subsequent latency. Long chapters never stutter.
While playing you can:
- Chapter forward / back — jump from the chapter list
- 30s skip / 10s rewind — podcast-style controls
- Speed 0.8×–2.0× — 1.2× is surprisingly comfortable
- Sleep timer — “stop in 15 minutes”, great for bedtime
- Bookmarks — drop one anywhere, resume from it
Furigana and tricky kanji
Aozora texts include furigana, so Yomite usually picks the right reading. Edge cases (especially personal names) can still trip it up.
The fix: register the reading in the pronunciation dictionary.
- Settings → Pronunciation dictionary → Add
- Word:
空知英秋/ Reading:そらちひであき - Save
That override applies everywhere — this book, every other book, every web article.
How Aozora reading fits the day
- Commute — short stories finish in one transit segment
- Chores — long novels in chapter chunks
- Bedtime — 天深シノ “Whisper” + sleep timer
- Driving — CarPlay. Mystery novels at the wheel improve attentiveness (citation needed)
- Walks — poetry collections pair surprisingly well
Wrapping up
Yomite + Aozora Bunko gives you a free audiobook library of Japanese classics in your pocket. If you’ve been meaning to revisit Sōseki or Dazai but never sit down to read, this is the easiest path back.
Works offline — subway, plane, emergency stash. The classics travel light.