Real NotebookLM notebooks, curated for you to explore.
A hand-picked directory of public NotebookLM notebooks — real examples of how people use NotebookLM for research, study, and work.
16 notebooks curated · Curated by the Sourclip team
For Students
How to studyby Bloomsbury Publishing — Bloomsbury Publishing's study-skills notebook distills its academic-skills catalog into practical help for students: managing time, preparing for exams, sharpening critical thinking, taking better notes, and working well in groups. A solid starting point if you want research-backed study advice instead of generic tips. (36 sources · study-skills, students, exam-prep, time-management, note-taking)Why it's worth exploring: A practical pick for students who want study advice grounded in an actual publisher's catalog, not internet folklore.
Science & Medicine
Secrets of the Super Agersby Eric Topol — A research notebook on the science of exceptional aging — what separates 'super agers' from typical age-related decline — built from 17 sources by physician-scientist Eric Topol. (17 sources · longevity, aging, health, medicine)Why it's worth exploring: Worth opening as a model for structuring a longevity-research notebook: a focused question, a tight source list, no filler.
Can chatbots serve doctors and patients?by Google Research — Google Research's look at AI in clinical care, centered on AMIE — an AI system being developed to support diagnostic conversations across general and specialist medicine — plus MedGemma and PH-LLM, which help interpret wearable health data. A grounded view of where clinical AI actually stands today. (24 sources · healthcare-ai, medicine, artificial-intelligence, clinical-research)Why it's worth exploring: Good if you want to understand what clinical AI can realistically do right now, without the hype.
OpenStax's Biologyby OpenStax — OpenStax's introductory biology notebook, built around the lens of evolution to build critical thinking and scientific reasoning. Covers modern biotechnology — genetic testing, DNA barcoding, genomics — alongside ecology and conservation topics like keystone species, biodiversity hotspots, and their potential as sources of new medicines. (13 sources · biology, science-education, genomics, ecology, evolution)Why it's worth exploring: A tidy way to see how a full intro-biology curriculum can live inside a single well-organized notebook.
The Science Fan's Guide To Visiting Yellowstone — A National Park Service-sourced guide to Yellowstone that pairs trip planning with the science behind it — the geology driving its geysers and hot springs, and the ecosystems that support its wildlife. Ask for a custom itinerary, or queue up an Audio Overview to listen to on the drive in. (17 sources · national-parks, geology, travel-planning, earth-science, ecosystems)Why it's worth exploring: A nice model for turning a stack of official sources into something genuinely useful for a trip, not just a report.
History & Humanities
Revolutionary Blueprints: The Foundersby U.S. National Archives with Google Arts & Culture — A National Archives collection of private letters, constitutional drafts, and founding addresses from Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison, Adams, Franklin, and Jay. Explore the Bill of Rights debates and Hamilton's plan of government, or ask about each Founder's role in shaping the young republic's intellectual foundations. (44 sources · history, american-history, founding-fathers, primary-sources, constitution)Why it's worth exploring: A well-sourced way to hear the Founders in their own words rather than through textbook summary.
Revolutionary Women: The Unsung Foundersby U.S. National Archives with Google Arts & Culture — A National Archives collection uncovering women's overlooked role in the American Revolution — private letters, plays, poetry, and military records from figures like Abigail Adams and Mercy Otis Warren. Investigate Phillis Wheatley's poetry, or Deborah Sampson, who served in the army disguised as a man. (39 sources · history, womens-history, american-history, primary-sources, revolutionary-war)Why it's worth exploring: A corrective to the usual Revolutionary War narrative, built entirely from primary sources.
Business & Finance
Earnings Reports For Top 50 Corporationsby Business — A 2025 earnings-report archive covering the world's largest public companies, built for investors and analysts tracking specific firms or industries. Ask detailed questions across the full dataset, surface macro trends like supply-chain disruption or geopolitical risk, or get an industry-level Audio Overview for tech, energy, and beyond. (267 sources · earnings-reports, finance, investing, corporations, market-research)Why it's worth exploring: A genuinely useful case for NotebookLM at scale — 267 sources is a lot to make queryable in one place.
The Energy Setting Mexico in Motion 🚘⚡by El Universal — EL UNIVERSAL's ongoing "Energía en Movimiento" coverage tracks Mexico's slow shift away from fossil fuels toward wind and other renewables. Drawing on reporting across its International, Economy, and local desks, it surfaces the public and private initiatives actually pushing the transition forward — and where it's stalling. (31 sources · energy, mexico, renewable-energy, journalism, policy)Why it's worth exploring: A useful entry point for following one country's energy transition through the lens of its own national press.
The Future of Digital Health and AI-Driven Careby Axios — Axios Pro Deals' health tech coverage for investors and operators — where VC dollars are flowing, how the IPO slowdown is reshaping exits, and why M&A activity in med tech is heating up. Useful for tracking CMS policy shifts and spotting new entrants in health tech investing. (25 sources · health-tech, venture-capital, investing, healthcare-policy, m-and-a)Why it's worth exploring: A sharp source list for anyone tracking where health tech investment is actually heading, not just where it's been.
Technology
Can a computer simulate a brain?by Google Research — Google Research's exploration of whether AI can simulate brain activity — from Turing and von Neumann's early theorizing to today's single-synapse-resolution brain reconstructions. Covers ZAPBench, a new public benchmark for predicting neuronal activity across entire vertebrate brains, and what it means for understanding intelligence itself. (17 sources · neuroscience, artificial-intelligence, computational-biology, research)Why it's worth exploring: A rare look at frontier neuroscience-AI research written for a general audience, not just specialists.
Creativity & Writing
Complete Sherlock Holmes & Game — The complete Sherlock Holmes canon (1892–1927) as a NotebookLM notebook — with a twist: type #GAME to step into an interactive text adventure where you play Holmes and solve a mystery built from the sources. A vivid example of turning a literary corpus into something playable, not just searchable. (62 sources · literature, mystery, interactive-fiction, classics, detective-fiction)Why it's worth exploring: A standout example of NotebookLM as a creative engine, not just a research tool — the same sources power both close reading and an actual game.
William Shakespeare: The Complete Works — The complete text of Shakespeare's plays, built for students, scholars, and theater lovers alike. Use the Mind Map for a bird's-eye view of recurring themes, ask for a plain-English translation of a tricky passage, or explore creative reinterpretations — like Hamlet retold as a series of newspaper articles. (45 sources · shakespeare, literature, drama, classics, theater)Why it's worth exploring: Shows how far you can push a single-author corpus — same source, close reading and playful reinterpretation both work.
Personal Productivity
How To Build A Life, from The Atlanticby The Atlantic — Arthur Brooks' Atlantic column "How to Build a Life," paired with ancient Greek philosophy, on finding meaning, navigating work-life balance, and handling a career change. Listen to an Audio Overview on the science of happiness, or just ask the chat for advice on whatever you're currently working through. (46 sources · self-improvement, philosophy, happiness, career, well-being)Why it's worth exploring: A well-curated blend of modern research and old philosophy for anyone thinking through a life decision.
Parenting Advice for the Digital Ageby Techno Sapiens — Psychologist Jacqueline Nesi distills her Techno Sapiens newsletter into science-backed parenting advice for the smartphone era — screen time, sleep, and the everyday friction of raising kids online. Ask about a specific parenting challenge, or listen to an Audio Overview of the latest research on digital-age parenting. (21 sources · parenting, psychology, screen-time, child-development)Why it's worth exploring: Advice grounded in actual peer-reviewed research, not another generic parenting listicle.
Your Ultimate Guide to Home Buyingby Zillow Group — Zillow's interactive guide to the home-buying process — from assessing financial readiness to choosing an agent to avoiding common first-time-buyer mistakes. Read curated articles, listen to an Audio Overview, or use the Mind Map to see how affordability, budgeting, and home search all connect. (40 sources · real-estate, home-buying, personal-finance, budgeting)Why it's worth exploring: A clear, well-organized starting point if you're navigating a home purchase for the first time.
Sourclip does not own, host, or control any notebook listed here — each belongs to its respective creator. If you'd like a listing updated or removed, or want to submit your own public notebook, contact us.