Success
Quick answer: Marvin 3 was removed from the App Store around early 2024 and has not been actively developed for years. If you still have it installed it may keep working for now, but every iOS update risks breaking it, and there is no way to reinstall or get fixes. For a current reader with the library depth Marvin fans loved, you need an actively maintained alternative.
Marvin 3 earned a devoted following for a reason. It treated a personal ebook library seriously, with strong Calibre awareness, real metadata handling, and annotation tools that put Apple Books to shame. So it is worth being clear about where things stand in 2026, because a lot of advice online is out of date.
Is Marvin 3 still working?
Marvin 3 is no longer on the App Store. It was pulled around early 2024, and its developer had effectively stopped active work years before that. Practically, that means:
- If you already have it installed, it may still launch and read your books. Many users are still nursing it along.
- If you do not, there is no supported way to install it anymore.
- Either way, it is frozen. No bug fixes, no compatibility updates. Each new iOS version is a roll of the dice, and when something breaks, it stays broken.
Relying on an abandoned app for your whole library is a slow-motion risk. The question is not whether it works today, but whether you want your reading life sitting on software that cannot be updated.
What made Marvin worth replacing carefully
Marvin was not just a reader, it was a library manager. If you are looking for a replacement, these are the things worth insisting on, because generic readers often drop them:
- Deep library handling: series, tags, metadata, and large collections that do not choke.
- A real connection to Calibre, so the library you maintain on a computer is usable on iOS.
- Genuine typography control, not three preset font sizes.
- Active development, so the app survives the next iOS release.
What to use instead
The honest landscape: several once-loved readers are gone or frozen. Marvin is removed, KyBook 3 has not been updated since 2019, and Stanza disappeared long ago. The successors worth considering are the ones still shipping updates.
justRead is built in the spirit Marvin users will recognize: a serious library manager and reader in one, actively developed for current iOS. It handles thousands of books with proper series and metadata, connects to your Calibre library with two-way sync that writes progress and ratings back, and offers the deep customization Marvin fans expect, with 200+ fonts, custom font import, exact margins, and per-book settings. It also adds detailed reading statistics and six-color highlights with Readwise export. For a side-by-side of how it maps to what you are leaving behind, see the Marvin 3 alternative page.
Marvin's best features, and where they live now
Marvin was loved for specific things, not just for existing. It is worth checking that whatever you move to actually covers them:
- A real library, not just a bookshelf. Marvin handled series, collections, and metadata properly. Look for a reader with smart sorting, tags, and collections that scale to thousands of books.
- Deep Calibre awareness. Marvin could work from Calibre. A modern equivalent should connect to your Calibre Content Server or an OPDS catalog, ideally with two-way sync so progress flows back.
- Annotation and highlights. Marvin's note-taking was a draw. A good replacement offers multi-color highlights and, crucially, a way to export them so they are not trapped again.
- Typography control. Marvin let you shape the page. Custom fonts, exact margins, and per-book settings are the modern version of that.
If a "Marvin alternative" is missing any of these, it is a downgrade, not a replacement.
Moving your library over
Because Marvin worked from your own files and Calibre, moving on is mostly painless:
- Keep your library in Calibre (or your cloud folder) as you always have.
- Install an actively maintained reader on your iPhone or iPad.
- Connect it to Calibre's Content Server or your cloud folder and import.
- Pick a reader with two-way sync if you want progress to follow you across devices. See how to sync Calibre to iPhone and iPad.
The bottom line
Marvin 3 had a great run, but in 2026 it is discontinued software living on borrowed time. Reading it today is fine; building your library's future on it is not. Move to something actively maintained and you keep everything you liked about Marvin, with updates that will still be coming next year.
Download justRead on the App Store and pick up where Marvin left off.
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