Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People like an easy read.
And that's totally fine.
There's lots of popular literature that I could not force myself to read, and I'm sure true literary snobs would look down on things I've enjoyed. If people read and get something out of it, all good as far as I'm concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People like an easy read.
And that's totally fine.
There's lots of popular literature that I could not force myself to read, and I'm sure true literary snobs would look down on things I've enjoyed. If people read and get something out of it, all good as far as I'm concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am starting The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny and see it's a 3.76 on Goodreads but the waitlist at MCPL is nearly 300 people long. I have seen popular books get not great ratings many times. What causes these books to become popular? Was it because Obama put it on his favorite books list (does he really read these books?)
Literary books don't always get the highest ratings on Goodreads, and I would put The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny in this category. It was in the NYT's top 10 books of 2025.
Anonymous wrote:People like an easy read.
Anonymous wrote:I am starting The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny and see it's a 3.76 on Goodreads but the waitlist at MCPL is nearly 300 people long. I have seen popular books get not great ratings many times. What causes these books to become popular? Was it because Obama put it on his favorite books list (does he really read these books?)
Anonymous wrote:BookTok (the original site that got younger readers reading Colleen Hoover, as an example) type videos are now all over Instagram and even Facebook. A lot of regular readers are driving reading right now.
I've also noticed that a lot of reader promoted books are diversity and/or progressive pushes, more than simply a great reads.