With Hoopla digital media service you can instantly borrow digital movies, music, eBooks and more, 24/7, with your library card, if your local public library offers the service. I first heard of it 5 months ago and found out the Flint Public Library doesn't have a subscription to Hoopla, but the Genesee District Library does. They don't both need it, because all residents of the city and county can have library cards to both, but the two library cards aren't interchangeable in the other library's system. I went to the main branch of the city library 99.9% of the time for physical media, usually to look at reference books I couldn't check out. I didn't know there were county libraries too, and one of them is only 1.4 miles away.
Your city and/or county library may have a Hoopla subscription too, and once you sign into that, you can get into a big network of libraries to watch movies and TV shows, listen to music and rent eBooks, etc. for free. I checked out an eBook from the city and had to return it after 2 weeks. I don't remember what web reader I was using on my computer but it reminded to return the eBook before it was overdue. I guess you have to pay a fine on them like real books if you keep them too long. I don't know. I haven't signed up for a card at the county library yet but I have my application filled out. I saw that they had videos somewhere I wanted to watch and couldn't because I needed Hoopla to do it.
https://www.hoopladigital.com/ I'm looking at a listing for an Audiobook of Welcome to the Monkey House by Kurt Vonnegut, read by David Strathairn at the city library. I've seen him in a few movies and TV shows and don't think I'd mind listening to him for awhile. I checked it out and will listen to it with OverDrive.