where can i watch bookish

You can watch the British crime drama series “Bookish” on a few different platforms, depending on where you are.
Main ways to watch “Bookish”
- UK
- Live/broadcast on the U&Alibi channel, with episodes airing as weekly double-bills.
* All six episodes are available on demand through Sky, Virgin Media, BT, and TalkTalk TV platforms.
* You can also access U&Alibi via streaming through NOW (formerly NOW TV), if you get it in your package.
- Australia
- Streaming on Max , with episodes available from the same release window as the UK.
- United States
- Streaming via PBS outlets:
- PBS Masterpiece channel on Amazon’s Prime Video (paid add‑on).
- Streaming via PBS outlets:
* WETA+, Thirteen, and related PBS streaming options, some with ad‑supported free viewing.
- Other/online options
- Some users can stream “Bookish” via NOW online or app if they’re in a supported region.
* YouTube TV may carry “Bookish” as part of its live TV lineup in some regions.
Simple answer (by region)
| Region | Where to watch “Bookish” |
|---|---|
| UK | U&Alibi (broadcast), on demand via Sky, Virgin, BT, TalkTalk, or via NOW if included. | [5][7][1][3]
| Australia | Max streaming service. | [1][5]
| USA | PBS (Thirteen, WETA+), PBS Masterpiece channel on Prime Video; may appear in YouTube TV lineup. | [10][5][9]
| Other countries | Check if U&Alibi or Max are carried by local providers, or if PBS Masterpiece is available in your region. | [5][9][1]
Forum & “latest news” flavor
Recent coverage frames “Bookish” as a cosy, slow-burn detective drama led by bookseller‑sleuth Gabriel Book, aimed at viewers who enjoy period‑style, gently paced mysteries. TV and tech outlets note that a second series has already been commissioned, and early buzz in 2025–2026 positioned it as a potential new comfort‑watch for crime‑drama fans.
Public forum threads and discussions (for example in British TV communities) show a mix of excitement about the cast and tone, alongside some viewers who find it a bit underwhelming or slow, so opinions are split but engaged.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.