BookTok

Storiaverse Launches Groundbreaking Mobile Entertainment App That Combines Reading, Animation and Audio for an Immersive “Read-Watch” Experience for Digital-Native Adults

Retrieved on: 
Mittwoch, April 3, 2024

Storiaverse is a first-of-its-kind app that enhances the reading experience for digital native adults.

Key Points: 
  • Storiaverse is a first-of-its-kind app that enhances the reading experience for digital native adults.
  • Transcending traditional entertainment formats, the Storiaverse app’s storytelling innovation combines animated video, audio and text into a visually rich and dynamic narrative experience.
  • By integrating multiple forms of media, Storiaverse takes users on a multi-sensory journey that propels narrative content beyond the confines of the page.
  • I think Storiaverse will make a positive impact on the animation community and give fans a totally new way to experience storytelling.

Librarians' Choice: The First-Ever Libby Book Awards

Retrieved on: 
Mittwoch, März 13, 2024

CLEVELAND, March 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Everyone knows the Oscars and the Emmys, and now there's a new award for books selected by one of the most trusted groups in the book community. The inaugural Libby Book Awards honor public librarians' best books of 2023 in 17 different categories. Nominated by an expert librarian panel and voted on by more than 1,700 librarians worldwide, the Libby Book Awards are sponsored by Libby, the library reading app, which is used by millions of readers in public libraries across North America

Key Points: 
  • The inaugural Libby Book Awards honor public librarians' best books of 2023 in 17 different categories.
  • From BookTok sensations to a debut mystery thriller, the titles chosen for this year's Libby Book Awards are for books published in 2023 and are sure to be found on many readers' to-be-read lists.
  • Winners run the gamut from New York Times bestselling author, Rebecca Ross, to novels such as To Shape a Dragons Breath.
  • Here are the winners of the 2024 Libby Book Awards, organized by genre (see the full list of winners and finalists ):

Entertainment Discovery Platform Likewise Introduces New AI-Powered Mobile App Upgrades to its Content Recommendations Ecosystem

Retrieved on: 
Mittwoch, März 13, 2024

BELLEVUE, Wash., March 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Likewise, the Bill Gates-backed personalized entertainment discovery platform with over 6 million registered users, today announced the rollout of several technology upgrades, further integrating its revolutionary AI agent, Pix, the world's first AI personal entertainment companion into the company's flagship mobile app. The new rollout will embed its proprietary AI, which first debuted in October 2023, deeper into the Likewise ecosystem, powering all content searching, browsing, and recommendations.

Key Points: 
  • The new rollout will embed its proprietary AI, which first debuted in October 2023, deeper into the Likewise ecosystem, powering all content searching, browsing, and recommendations.
  • Likewise App Unlocks AI-Powered Search and Discovery for Personalized Movie, TV Show, Book, and Podcast Recommendations
    In just a few months since the launch of Pix, Likewise has seen an impressive 163% growth in community recommendations.
  • "Our AI-powered platform is playing a central role in entertainment discovery by providing our users with the most highly personalized, proactive, and relevant recommendations," said Ian Morris, CEO of Likewise.
  • "This exciting extension of the Likewise mobile app is enabling our users to discover, collect, and share their favorite entertainment content in a way that has never been possible."

15 literary podcasts to make you laugh, learn and join conversations about books

Retrieved on: 
Mittwoch, Januar 3, 2024

But the soaring popularity of podcasts like The Penguin Podcast and NPR’s Book of the Day reveals something more.

Key Points: 
  • But the soaring popularity of podcasts like The Penguin Podcast and NPR’s Book of the Day reveals something more.
  • As writer Tom McCallister points out, while traditional reviews may be in decline, literary podcasts are not just “filling the void”.
  • Like community reviews and the more recent surge of #BookTok and #Bookstagram content on social media, literary podcasts feed the rich social networks that form around books.
  • But literary podcasts invite audiences to engage with books and writing in all kinds of ways.

1. The Garret


If books are divisive, literary podcasts are too. What’s enjoyable for one listener might not work for another. My own listening habits are driven largely by curiosity rather than loyalty: I listen to episodes haphazardly, when a particular guest, topic or title tempts me, dropping down the rabbit hole of whichever book I happen to be reading.

  • That said, I return most often to The Garret, an Australian podcast for “lovers of books and storytelling”.
  • She interviews authors about craft, criticism and some of the stories behind the stories that have found their way to publication.

2. Secrets from the Green Room


Australians are some of the world’s most enthusiastic podcast listeners, so it’s little surprise we produce some of the best bookish podcasts around.
Secrets from the Green Room is dedicated to author stories you “won’t hear anywhere else”. Irma Gold and Karen Viggers publish new episodes every few weeks. They invite guests to candidly share their own experiences navigating the world of publication, landing on topics as varied as ghostwriting, the “creep” of imposter syndrome, and the challenges of teaching writing at university.

3. Read This


The Monthly’s weekly offering, Read This, features interviews with prominent writers from Australia and around the world. Its first episode took host Michael Williams (editor of The Monthly) to Helen Garner’s house for “conversation and cake”. Later guests have included Rebecca Makkai and George Saunders.

4. Beyond the Zero


Beyond the Zero also spotlights new titles through extended conversations with both local and international authors. Each episode is a deep dive into the books and writers that have influenced the guest, so far ranging from Booker winner Paul Lynch to Australian literary authors like Emmett Stinson on Gerald Murnane.

5. The First Time


On The First Time podcast, novelists Katherine Colette and Kate Mildenhall take readers behind the scenes, into the “logistics and feels of writing and publishing a book”. They regularly feature debut authors, as part of their (paid) Featured Book series. There’s also a Masters series, with veteran writers like Richard Flanagan, and episodes that deal with “awkward” conversations, including how book endorsements work.

6 & 7. ABC RN: The Bookshelf and The Book Show

  • On The Bookshelf, Kate Evans and Cassie McCullagh review newly published fiction, alongside guest reviewers, in hour-long episodes broadcast every Friday.
  • This year, The Book Show also ran a fascinating four-part series on literary fakes and frauds, starting with the John Hughes scandal.

8 & 9. The New Yorker: Fiction and Poetry podcasts

  • Each month, the magazine’s fiction editor, Deborah Treisman, invites some of the world’s most celebrated authors to read aloud from another author’s work.
  • (And if you’re a fan of the read-aloud format, you might also enjoy The New Yorker’s Poetry podcast.)

10. Backlisted


Presented by John Mitchinson and Andy Miller, Backlisted solicits a writerly guest to choose a book they love and wax lyrical about why it deserves a wider audience (like Jennifer Egan and Nell Stevens on Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South). Recently celebrating its 200th episode, Backlisted prides itself on “giving new life to old books” – a refreshing alternative to literary podcasts that focus almost exclusively on recent releases.

11. Overdue

  • Overdue, a podcast “about the books you’ve been meaning to read”, is also sure to add some dog-eared classics to your to-be-read pile.
  • Try the episode about Camus’s The Stranger if – like me – you only pretended to read it in high school.

12. Book Riot


For listeners interested in industry trends, the Book Riot podcast publishes weekly episodes that revolve loosely around “what’s new, cool, and worth talking about in the world of books and reading”. Jeff and Rebecca, who also edit the Book Riot website, serve up a gratifying mix of book-related commentary and news, including reading recommendations, awards chatter and emerging or evolving issues (think book bans and generative AI).

13. If Books Could Kill

  • If Books Could Kill offers a diverting but incisive take on “the airport bestsellers that captured our hearts and ruined our minds”.
  • As a scholar of self-help books, I was primed to regard this podcast with deep suspicion, but the episodes are well researched and thoroughly entertaining.

14. & 15. Reading Glasses and Marlon and Jake Read Dead People

  • Reading Glasses is a podcast about “reading better” that includes an episode on how to get borrowed books back.
  • And in Marlon and Jake Read Dead People, Man Booker Prize winning author Marlon James and his editor, Jake Morrissey, share big opinions on all things books, authors and writing – like our evergreen quandaries around reading good books by terrible people or judging a book by its cover.


Amber Gwynne does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Expert advice to help young people keep their new year resolutions

Retrieved on: 
Mittwoch, Januar 3, 2024

If you’re in need of some extra motivation to stick to your new year resolutions, there’s no better place to look than The Conversation’s archives. Our Quarter Life series is full of expert advice to help readers in their 20s and 30s navigate life’s transitions. Read on for some pieces to help you reach your goals this year.Take care of your mental health If you have resolved to take better care of your mental health this year, you might as well start first thing in the morning.

Key Points: 


If you’re in need of some extra motivation to stick to your new year resolutions, there’s no better place to look than The Conversation’s archives. Our Quarter Life series is full of expert advice to help readers in their 20s and 30s navigate life’s transitions. Read on for some pieces to help you reach your goals this year.

Take care of your mental health

  • If you have resolved to take better care of your mental health this year, you might as well start first thing in the morning.
  • If it’s available to you, you could also consider taking a mental health day – here’s how to make the most of one.
  • From the challenges of beginning a career and taking care of our mental health, to the excitement of starting a family, adopting a pet or just making friends as an adult.
  • The articles in this series explore the questions and bring answers as we navigate this turbulent period of life.

Live a healthier lifestyle

  • If you are someone who deals with a period regularly, you may have heard of “cycle syncing”.
  • Here’s what the evidence says about some popular diets that are said to help manage symptoms of long COVID.
  • And trying to get more sleep is always a good goal – but if you don’t manage one night, don’t panic.

Be more eco-friendly

  • Veganuary (going vegan just for the month of January) is a popular way to start the year with a smaller carbon footprint.
  • Here’s a guide to decoding all those little symbols on clothing tags that will help you take better care of your clothes.

Scroll less, read more

  • But new research shows that quitting social media cold turkey may not be as good for you as you think.
  • With this in mind, there are steps you can take to improve your relationship with the apps.
  • BookTok trends are having a powerful impact on the publishing industry, and may be influencing what you read.

Be a better friend

  • If your 2024 goal is to make new friends, try looking outside your age group.
  • To nurture the friendships you have already, this excellent read can help you develop empathy and sharpen your listening skills.

Expert advice to help you keep your new year resolutions

Retrieved on: 
Mittwoch, Januar 3, 2024

If you’re in need of some extra motivation to stick to your new year resolutions, there’s no better place to look than The Conversation’s archives. Our Quarter Life series is full of expert advice to help readers in their 20s and 30s navigate life’s transitions. Read on for some pieces to help you reach your goals this year.Take care of your mental health If you have resolved to take better care of your mental health this year, you might as well start first thing in the morning.

Key Points: 


If you’re in need of some extra motivation to stick to your new year resolutions, there’s no better place to look than The Conversation’s archives. Our Quarter Life series is full of expert advice to help readers in their 20s and 30s navigate life’s transitions. Read on for some pieces to help you reach your goals this year.

Take care of your mental health

  • If you have resolved to take better care of your mental health this year, you might as well start first thing in the morning.
  • If it’s available to you, you could also consider taking a mental health day – here’s how to make the most of one.
  • From the challenges of beginning a career and taking care of our mental health, to the excitement of starting a family, adopting a pet or just making friends as an adult.
  • The articles in this series explore the questions and bring answers as we navigate this turbulent period of life.

Live a healthier lifestyle

  • If you are someone who deals with a period regularly, you may have heard of “cycle syncing”.
  • Here’s what the evidence says about some popular diets that are said to help manage symptoms of long COVID.
  • And trying to get more sleep is always a good goal – but if you don’t manage one night, don’t panic.

Be more eco-friendly

  • Veganuary (going vegan just for the month of January) is a popular way to start the year with a smaller carbon footprint.
  • Here’s a guide to decoding all those little symbols on clothing tags that will help you take better care of your clothes.

Scroll less, read more

  • But new research shows that quitting social media cold turkey may not be as good for you as you think.
  • With this in mind, there are steps you can take to improve your relationship with the apps.
  • BookTok trends are having a powerful impact on the publishing industry, and may be influencing what you read.

Be a better friend

  • If your 2024 goal is to make new friends, try looking outside your age group.
  • To nurture the friendships you have already, this excellent read can help you develop empathy and sharpen your listening skills.

How often do you think about the Roman empire? TikTok trend exposed the way we gender history

Retrieved on: 
Montag, Oktober 2, 2023

This question, posed to men by their partners on social media app TikTok, has led to a storm of viral videos.

Key Points: 
  • This question, posed to men by their partners on social media app TikTok, has led to a storm of viral videos.
  • Women are amused to discover the answer is often “every day”, or at least “several times a week”.
  • The Roman empire, like other periods of human history, had approximately the same numbers of men and women.
  • From this perspective, it is hardly surprising that women are not spending as much time thinking about the Roman empire.

Is the teaching of history gendered?

    • In my experience of university teaching, the title of the course seems to strongly influence the gender balance of the class.
    • I have taught in art history departments where the courses were mostly attended by women (art appreciation being often seen as feminine and in history departments where there was, by contrast, a rough gender balance.
    • Indeed, women are an overall minority in university history teaching.
    • It turned out, on talking to them, that they were deeply uncomfortable about being there because they thought gender history was all about attacking men.
    • In the past this was often put down to supposed differences between Latin languages being intuitive and Germanic ones analytical.

Homemade and cosmopolitan, the idiosyncratic writing of Gerald Murnane continues to attract devotees

Retrieved on: 
Donnerstag, September 7, 2023

Already by then a rather outdated term, “postmodernism” never quite gelled with Murnane’s writing.

Key Points: 
  • Already by then a rather outdated term, “postmodernism” never quite gelled with Murnane’s writing.
  • Review: Murnane – Emmett Stinson (Miegunyah Press) It is with this exact observation that Emmett Stinson begins his new critical study of Murnane.
  • Written for Miegunyah Press’s “Contemporary Australian Writers” series, Stinson’s Murnane is compact and accessible, designed to interest potential and beginning readers of Murnane.

The breathing author

    • After a brief stint as a seminarian, Murnane trained as a teacher, then taught in primary schools from 1960 to 1968.
    • From 1980, he lectured in creative writing at Prahran College of Advanced Education (now Deakin University), retiring from that position in 1995.
    • He has since produced a further seven books, along with a fully restored version of an earlier book.
    • Murnane’s many self-imposed rules, such as never wearing sunglasses, never using a computer, and never travelling in a plane (see his 2002 essay “The Breathing Author” for a full list), seem to mirror the contents of his fiction.
    • His performance teasingly invites readers to connect the real-life (“breathing”) author with the narrators (or “implied authors”) of his fiction.

Inventive and playful

    • All manifest his distinctive rigour, exemplified by his famously “chiseled sentences”, as J.M.
    • His work is technically and conceptually inventive, even playful, and it has attracted admiring readers at home and abroad.
    • In recent decades, his readership has grown significantly, enhanced by the internet and social media, which have allowed niche readers to connect with each other.
    • Noting all this, as well as the vagaries of Murnane’s publishing history, Stinson ponders his subject’s somewhat divided Australian reception.
    • Read more:
      Bad art friends – Jen Craig may be the best Australian writer you've never heard of

Post-break

    • Their purpose is to revisit, reorder, ramify and complete Murnane’s body of work as a whole.
    • Stinson wants us to recognise “Murnane’s desire to frame and shape his own literary legacy”.
    • I came away from them with a sharpened sense of each book, even as I could see continuities across the whole.
    • The chapter on Barley Patch highlights (among other things) modes of reading and writing that are evident in Murnane’s work.

Late style, late recognition

    • In his substantial conclusion, subtitled “Gerald Murnane’s Late Style”, Stinson brings these elements together, succinctly and effectively explaining his larger argument.
    • It is marked by the artist’s decision to withdraw from the world, follow his or her own desires, and opt “for complexity over resolution”.
    • Admitting that this may be true of all Murnane’s writing, Stinson nonetheless argues for its special applicability to the four post-break fictions.
    • Beyond this conclusion, we encounter one more component: the transcript of Stinson’s recent interview with Murnane himself.

Shopping, showjumping and a notorious goldfish sex scene: the bonkers world of the bonkbuster

Retrieved on: 
Montag, August 28, 2023

Allegedly, he likes listening to the music of Michael Bublé, watching Emily in Paris – and reading the novels of Jilly Cooper.

Key Points: 
  • Allegedly, he likes listening to the music of Michael Bublé, watching Emily in Paris – and reading the novels of Jilly Cooper.
  • Cooper is a stalwart of the British literary scene, awarded an OBE in 2004 and a CBE in 2018 for services to literature.
  • In later books in the so-called “Rutshire Chronicles”, such as Rivals (1988) and Polo (1991), he becomes Tory minister for sport.

What is a bonkbuster?

    • Feel at last bonkbuster is on the road.
    • Publisher [… enquires] about progress of blockbuster.
    • Bonkbusters are characterised by melodrama and spectacle – in other words, they are completely, unashamedly, unabashedly bonkers.
    • The bonkbusters are no different, with their focus on wealth and power – and of course sex.

Sex, relationships and goldfish

    • There are key differences in attitude between the two forms – including the way they approach sex.
    • Sex can be euphoric and multi-orgasmic – this is certainly the case in what is arguably the most infamous bonkbuster sex scene, the goldfish scene from Conran’s Lace.
    • This exemplifies another typical bonkbuster theme: bad relationships.
    • Read more:
      A whole new set of horny lords and ladies: how Bridgerton brought romance book serialisation to television

Orgasms and class

    • However, it is arguably in their depictions of sex and relationships – particularly their championing of female orgasms – that the most compelling case for reading them as feminist texts can be made.
    • Bonkbusters – especially Jilly Cooper’s books – are often associated with the English upper classes.
    • Cooper’s aristocratic characters attend parties in (often quite tumbledown) stately homes, or socialise at polo matches.
    • What all bonkbusters endorse is aspiration – to be richer, to be famous, to have better sex (or more sex), or to gain a husband.

Where has the bonkbuster gone?

    • The 21st century saw the bonkbuster disappear somewhat from view – or, at least, from its wholesale domination of bestseller lists.
    • The slew of copycats died down and other forms of women’s fiction, such as chick-lit, arose in its wake.
    • However, this is not to say the bonkbuster has gone away.

From Laggard to Leader: Record Sales of Romance Books Reflect Next Generation of Contemporary Readers

Retrieved on: 
Montag, Juli 10, 2023

Chicago, July 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sales of romance print books increased 52% in the 12-months ending May 2023, according to Circana , formerly IRI and The NPD Group.

Key Points: 
  • Chicago, July 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sales of romance print books increased 52% in the 12-months ending May 2023, according to Circana , formerly IRI and The NPD Group.
  • Much of this growth can be attributed to the contemporary interests of new, younger readers, with #BookTok and page-to-screen streaming TV projects leading the sources of discovery.
  • “It is hard to overstate how profoundly shifts in romance-reader demographics have drastically changed the romance books landscape since 2020,” McLean said.
  • With traditional and new romance authors sharing the top of the market, we fully except readers to continue to flock to this rejuvenated category this summer and beyond.”