Hartford Courant (Sunday)

How crying on TikTok is starting to sell lots of books

Young women recommend tearjerker­s and generate buzz via social media app

- By Elizabeth A. Harris

“We Were Liars” came out in 2014, so when the book’s author, E. Lockhart, saw that it was back on the bestseller list last summer, she was delighted. And confused.

“I had no idea what the hell was happening,” she said.

Lockhart’s children filled her in: It was because of TikTok.

An app known for serving up short videos on everything from dance moves to fashion tips, cooking tutorials and funny skits, TikTok is not an obvious destinatio­n for book buzz. But videos made mostly by women in their teens and 20s have come to dominate a growing niche under the hashtag #BookTok, where users recommend books, record time lapses of themselves reading or sob openly into the camera after an emotionall­y crushing ending.

These videos are starting to sell a lot of books, and many of the creators are just as surprised as everyone else.

“I want people to feel what I feel,” said Mireille Lee, 15, who started @ alifeoflit­erature in February with her sister, Elodie, 13, and now has nearly 200,000 followers. “At school, people don’t really acknowledg­e books, which is really annoying.”

Many Barnes & Noble locations around the

United States have set up BookTok tables displaying titles like “They Both Die at the End,” “The Cruel Prince,” “A Little Life” and others that have gone viral. There is no correspond­ing Instagram or Twitter table, however, because no other social media platform seems to move copies the way TikTok does.

“These creators are unafraid to be open and emotional about the books that make them cry and sob or scream or become so angry they throw it across the room, and it becomes this very emotional 45-second video that people immediatel­y connect with,” said Shannon DeVito, director of books at Barnes & Noble. “We haven’t seen these types of crazy sales — I mean tens of thousands of copies a month — with other social media formats.”

The Lee sisters, who live in Brighton, England, started making BookTok videos while bored at home during the pandemic. Many of their posts feel like tiny movie trailers, where pictures flash across the screen to a moody soundtrack.

For “The Cruel Prince,” you see the book cover, then a woman riding a horse, a bloody goblet, a castle in a tree — each for a split second while the Billie Eilish song “you should see me in a crown” plays in the background. No need for a spoiler alert: The whole thing is over in about 12 seconds, leaving you with the feeling of the book, but little sense of what happens in it.

The video they created that highlights “We Were Liars” has been viewed more than 5 million times.

The vast majority of BookTok videos happen organicall­y, posted by enthusiast­ic young readers. For publishers it has been an unexpected jolt: an industry that depends

on people getting lost in the printed word is getting dividends from a digital app built for fleeting attention spans. Now publishers are starting to catch on, contacting those with big followings to offer free books or payment in exchange for publicizin­g their titles. (The Lee sisters have received books from authors but have yet to be contacted by publishers or paid for their posts.)

Many popular TikTok users have strategies to maximize views. They might use background songs that are already doing well on the app, use TikTok’s analytics to see what time of day their posts do the best and try to put up videos on a regular schedule. But it’s still tricky to predict what will take off.

“Ideas that take me 30 seconds to come up with, those do really well, and the ones I work on for days or hours, those completely tank,” said Pauline Juan, a student who, at 25, says she feels “a little older” than many on BookTok. “But the

most popular videos are about the books that make you cry. If you’re crying on camera, your views go up!”

Most of the BookTok favorites are books that sold well when they were first published, and some are award winners, like “The Song of Achilles,” which won the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2012, a prestigiou­s fiction prize. The novel retells the

Greek myth of Achilles as a romance between him and his companion Patroclus. It does not have a happy ending.

The #songofachi­lles hashtag has 19 million views on TikTok.

“I wish I could send them all chocolates!” said Madeline Miller, the book’s author.

Published in 2012, “The Song of Achilles” sold well, but not nearly as well as it’s selling now.

Miriam Parker, a vice president and associate publisher at Ecco, which released “The Song of Achilles,” said the company saw sales spike on Aug.

9 but couldn’t figure out why. It eventually traced it to a TikTok video called “books that will make you sob,” published Aug. 8 by @moongirlre­ads_. Today, that video, which also includes “We Were Liars,” has been viewed nearly 6 million times.

The person behind @ moongirlre­ads_ is Selene Velez, an 18-year-old from the Los Angeles area who joined TikTok last year, while finishing high school on Zoom. She said she made the “books that will make you sob” video because a commenter asked her for tearjerker recommenda­tions.

“I was like, well, we’ll see how that goes,” Velez said. “I’m not sure how many people are going to want to hear how much some random girl cried about a book.”

So she posted the video and went and had lunch with her family. When she checked TikTok again a few hours later, she said, the video had 100,000 views.

 ?? PETER FLUDE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sisters Mireille and Elodie Lee, who started a literary-themed TikTok account together, in Hove, England. “BookTok” videos are starting to influence publishers and bestseller lists.
PETER FLUDE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Sisters Mireille and Elodie Lee, who started a literary-themed TikTok account together, in Hove, England. “BookTok” videos are starting to influence publishers and bestseller lists.
 ?? ROZETTE RAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Selene Velez, who also started a literary-themed TikTok account, at her home in Lakewood, California.
ROZETTE RAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES Selene Velez, who also started a literary-themed TikTok account, at her home in Lakewood, California.

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