
This article, by Natalie Wall, PhD researcher in our Department of English, was originally published as part of The ConversationβsΒ Quarter Life, series about issues affecting those of us in our twenties and thirties:Β
If youβve been in a bookshop recently, you may have seen references to BookTok β whether itβs stickers on books or whole tables dedicated to βBookTok favouritesβ.
BookTok is a community on the social media app TikTok. Creators make short videos recommending, reviewing, or just generally chatting about books. This community has become one of the biggest on the platform and its hashtag (#BookTok) has been used on over 60 billion videos. BookTokβs influence over the publishing industry and what young people are reading is staggering.
Online reading communities have been around for a while. Goodreads β a social cataloguing platform where readers can follow friends and authors, get book recommendations and read user-submitted reviews β was launched in 2007, and there are other communities on sites such as YouTube (BookTube) and Instagram (Bookstagram).
However, none of these sites seem to have captured the attention of readers, publishers and retailers quite like BookTok. Caroline Hardman, a literary agent at Hardman & Swainson, corroborates this, telling The Guardian: βItβs having a strong effect on what publishers look for.β
Is BookTokβs impact positive or negative?
The main demographic of BookTok creators, viewers and authors is young women. While books popular with young women have gained immense broad popularity before β for example, the Twilight saga (from 2005) by Stephenie Meyer, and the paranormal romance fever that followed β young women have rarely been taken seriously as either critics and readers.
But times are changing. The books most popular with BookTok β such as romance, fantasy and the hybrid genre βromantasyβ β are being picked up more and more by publishers and displayed more prominently in bookshops.
Book series such as A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J Maas (from 2015) are immensely popular on BookTok β with some videos about the series amassing over a million views. The series is marketed alongside new releases like The Hurricane Wars by Thea Guanzon or A Touch of Chaos by Scarlett St. Clair, with Maasβs series appearing as βsimilarβ or βrecommendedβ on Amazon, Waterstones and Goodreads, as well as often being mentioned in readersβ reviews.
Mythology retellings are also immensely popular on BookTok, sparked by titles such as The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller (2011). Such titles now heavily feature on publishersβ new release and coming soon lists.
While it is fascinating to see that young women and their tastes can have such a big impact on the publishing industry, thereβs a risk it may homogenise the industry. Literary critic Barry Pierce has said that BookTok reads βall sort of have the same coverβ. Meanwhile author Stephanie Danler said of her foray into BookTok: βIt seemed impossible to discover different fiction. It was the same 20 books over and over.β
BookTok also has a problem with diversity β in more ways than one. Its recommendations are overwhelmingly by white authors, and it is unclear what the long-term effects of this will be on both publishing and the young readers who flock to the app for recommendations. Furthermore, by catering to this huge audience of young women, publishers are forgoing books by men, especially emerging writers.
Reviving books and identifying as βreadersβ
BookTok is also proving a powerful tool for renewing interest in past titles. At the inaugural BookTok Awards held in August, Dolly Aldertonβs memoir Everything I Know About Love won in the βbest book to end a reading slumpβ category, despite being published in 2018.
These awards even had a βbest BookTok revivalβ category, with the award going to Jane Austenβs Pride and Prejudice (1813). Itβs funny to think that Austen, an author so revered that is she is printed on the Β£10 note, is being βrevivedβ, but the younger demographic of BookTok may mean that new audiences are coming to even such established authors.
It also makes startlingly clear how much BookTok and its creators are tastemakers who are shaping what and how young people read. As some creators themselves have said, BookTok favours βconvincing you to read books based on their aestheticsβ.
This might appear a shallow way to read but it is clearly very compelling, especially for a generation for whom countercultures have given way to microtrends and niche aesthetic identities. Young people are no longer punks, hippies or goths, but instead dress with a βcottagecoreβ or βdark academiaβ aesthetic.
Identity and aesthetics are potent tools that BookTok utilises to drive views, enthusiasm and sales β even if the latter isnβt the creatorsβ explicit aim. BookTok encourages people to identify as βreadersβ rather than simply to read β indeed, to identify as specific kinds of reader such as βromance readersβ or βfantasy readersβ.
The constant supply of new content, book releases and ways to show yourself to be a reader β all displayed in visually compelling snippets β means that BookTokβs impact on what young people are reading is uniquely powerful.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.





