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paperboy

CI License: MIT paperboy MCP server

Claude finding three papers, filing them in Zotero, and sending two to a Kindle

An MCP server that delivers research papers and books to your e-reader, with Zotero as the source of truth. Ask Claude for a reading list, then say "queue them and send to my Kindle." (MCP is the plugin protocol Claude uses: this program runs on your machine or your cloud project, and Claude calls its tools during conversation.) Works locally in Claude Code and Claude Desktop; a Cloud Run deployment adds claude.ai and the Claude mobile app, so papers can be sent from a phone (docs/deploy.md).

Two things are kept separate: delivering a paper to your device and cataloguing a work in Zotero. You can do either. A book you own, a paywalled reference, or a PDF you already have can all be tracked in the library without being staged for the e-reader.

Zotero itself is optional: without it you can still search and send papers one-off. The reading queue, collections, and duplicate protection across sessions need it.

How it works

You ask Claude for papers; it uses paperboy's tools to find, queue, and deliver them. What that looks like in practice:

  • Papers you queue land in a Reading Queue collection in Zotero, created on demand.

  • Once a paper reaches your device, paperboy tags it sent-to-ereader in Zotero, so it skips papers already sent to your e-reader, even in a later conversation. (Without Zotero there's no memory between sends, so this protection needs it.)

  • Claude can file papers into your topical collections too. It proposes one from the paper's topic and your existing collection names, and asks you when the fit is unclear. A paper can sit in several collections at once, so filing never disturbs the queue.

  • Papers are found by arXiv id, DOI, or title (a close-enough title match, so a reading list Claude wrote in the chat can be sent as-is). When a title matches only loosely, paperboy offers the closest candidate to confirm rather than guessing or failing silently.

  • Books work too: add_book resolves an ISBN, a book DOI, or a title into a proper Zotero book item (publisher, edition, ISBN, pages). Books are catalogued, not delivered.

  • Have the PDF already (a working paper, lecture notes, an open-access textbook)? attach_pdf files it in Zotero with the PDF attached, using metadata you give it, and can send it to the e-reader in the same step.

  • When a reference can't be resolved, the receipt says why and which tool fits, rather than sending you hunting for a better URL. A paper with no open-access PDF is a normal library record, not an error.

Zotero holds all of this, so the server keeps no state of its own: no database to run, and safe to redeploy at any time.

Delivery backends

Backend

Devices

How

email (default)

Kindle, PocketBook, anything with an email intake

SMTP to the device address. Kindle constraints enforced: 25 attachments / 50 MB per email; sender must be on the Approved Personal Document E-mail List

dropbox

Kobo (native Dropbox sync on the device)

Uploads via the Dropbox API. Kobo only syncs Apps/Rakuten Kobo/, so use a Full Dropbox-scoped app with DROPBOX_FOLDER="/Apps/Rakuten Kobo"; an App-folder-scoped app can't reach it

Related MCP server: Academic Paper Search MCP Server

Tools

Tool

What it does

search_papers

Search OpenAlex (general) or arXiv (source="arxiv"); results carry a ref and an open_access_pdf flag

recommend_papers

Discover related or new papers: citation-graph recommendations (Semantic Scholar) seeded from your Zotero library, plus keyword discovery from interests Claude distills out of the conversation. Excludes papers you already have

send_papers

One-off send by arXiv id, DOI, URL, or title (also records in Zotero if configured)

queue_papers

Add papers to the Zotero Reading Queue without sending (optionally filed into topical collections)

add_to_library

Track papers in Zotero without queueing or sending them (owned, paywalled, or read-later); a missing OA PDF is not treated as a failure

add_book

Catalogue a book by ISBN, book DOI, or title as a Zotero book item (Crossref, Open Library, Google Books); never delivered

attach_pdf

Ingest a PDF you already have (grey literature, open-access textbooks) with the PDF attached and metadata you supply; optionally send it

list_collections

List Zotero collections so Claude can propose where to file a paper, or ask you

file_papers

File queued papers into a topical collection (created on demand; queue membership unaffected)

unfile_papers

Remove papers from one collection (for misfiled items); the papers themselves and their queue/sent state are untouched

list_queue

Show the queue with per-item status (unsent / sent / no-open-access-pdf)

remove_from_queue

Delete queue items by exact ref or title

send_queue

Send every unsent queue item (auto-split under email limits), then tag as sent

setup_status

Report what's configured and what's missing (no secrets) so Claude can guide setup

Setup

Run the interactive wizard. It asks which e-reader you have, walks through only the credentials that device needs, and validates each one as you enter it: SMTP login test, Zotero key check with automatic library ID lookup, full Dropbox OAuth exchange.

uv sync && uv run paperboy setup

docs/setup.md is the step-by-step version: where to find each credential in Zotero, Amazon, Gmail, and Dropbox, with links to the official page for every step.

How much setup you need depends on the device:

You have

Credentials needed

Kindle

2 — Send-to-Kindle address + an SMTP app password

PocketBook

2 — Send-to-PocketBook address + an SMTP app password

Kobo

a Dropbox app (key/secret + one OAuth approval) + a contact email

+ Zotero queue (optional)

1 — a Zotero API key (library ID auto-detected)

If you'd rather set up by hand, cp .env.example .env and fill it in; every variable is documented there. Then register with Claude Code:

claude mcp add paperboy -- uv run --directory /path/to/paperboy paperboy

--directory matters: the server loads .env from its working directory (set PAPERBOY_ENV=/path/to/.env to point elsewhere).

If paperboy is added but half-configured, ask Claude to "check my paperboy setup". The setup_status tool reports what's missing and what to do next, without passing secrets through the chat.

Remote use

You were given a URL and a token

If someone shared their deployment with you, this is your whole setup:

claude mcp add --transport http paperboy <URL>/mcp \
  --header "Authorization: Bearer <token>"

The URL needs the /mcp path suffix. Treat the token like a password: it lets you act fully as the owner: send email from their address, deliver to their e-reader, and read and edit their Zotero library. There is no reduced-permission mode; if that's not what you both want, deploy your own instance.

Deploy your own

One script creates a locked-down, single-tenant Cloud Run service. You need the gcloud CLI and a Google Cloud account with billing enabled, so a card has to be on file. What you pay depends on how much you use it: a personal deployment sending papers now and then usually falls inside Cloud Run's free tier and costs nothing, but heavy or shared use can go past it. The script sets a $1/month budget alert so you hear about it if your bill ever starts to climb.

uv run paperboy setup && ./deploy/deploy.sh my-paperboy-project

How a client connects to the deployed server depends on the client:

  • Claude Code and the API use a bearer token the script generates. You paste it into an Authorization header, as in the section above.

  • claude.ai and the Claude mobile app usually can't send a bearer token from their connector dialog, so they sign in with Google instead. That needs a one-time Google OAuth client, which you create in your own Cloud project (a Web-application client with one redirect URI). Sign-in is restricted to your own email address, and because paperboy only asks Google for your email, the sign-in doesn't expire.

docs/deploy.md has the full procedure for both, including the OAuth console steps, the security model, and cost bounds. The deploy script also prints the exact OAuth steps with your project's URLs already filled in, so you're not copying them from here.

Development & contributing

uv for packaging, ruff (Google style), ty, pytest behind an enforced 80% coverage gate. uv sync && uv run pre-commit install, then uv run pytest. The suite runs entirely offline; no credentials needed to develop.

Contributions are welcome. CONTRIBUTING.md covers setup, testing conventions, and what makes a change easy to merge; SECURITY.md covers how to report vulnerabilities (privately, please).

Roadmap

  • reMarkable delivery backend (real cloud API)

  • arXiv HTML → EPUB via pandoc for reflowable reading (opt-in per paper; conversion is lossy for dense math, so PDF stays the default)

  • Kindle highlights → Zotero notes round-trip (My Clippings.txt parser with fuzzy title matching)

Prior art & acknowledgments

Ideas paperboy builds on: the tag-driven Zotero→Kindle idea from stakats/zotero-to-kindle (circa 2011, by one of Zotero's original directors); wahiggins3/send-to-kindle-mcp; openags/paper-search-mcp; and 54yyyu/zotero-mcp, the model for our setup wizard; paperboy leaves library management to it.

Thank you to arXiv for use of its open access interoperability. Paper metadata and open-access links come from OpenAlex, Crossref, and Unpaywall, all run as open scholarly infrastructure. Recommendations via the Semantic Scholar Recommendations API (Allen Institute for AI). Library management via the Zotero web API. Built on FastMCP, pyzotero, and httpx.

paperboy was built with Claude Code.

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