Marin Independent Journal

Is reading the hottest thing you can do as a single person?

- By Gina Cherelus

One of the first questions men ask Angela Liu on dating apps is “What are you reading?” The question is a softball for Liu, a self-proclaimed lover of literature. “I really care about the human condition and emotions and stuff,” she said.

What she has noticed, however, is that many men aren't into those kinds of books, and a question that may have been intended to screen her often ends up backfiring.

“I can't stand dudes who just read self-help books or things specifical­ly related to the job that they're doing and that's all they read,” Liu, 27, said Friday at a book club for singles in Manhattan.

There's something flirty and magnetic about a physical book that tablets and smartphone­s can't really capture — the idea of meeting someone in a library, in the aisle of a bookstore or while reading on the subway, for instance, remains stubbornly high on the list of many people's romantic fantasies. Although there might be more romantic activities a single person could do on a Friday night in New York City, very few beat potentiall­y stumbling into your next bibliophil­e boo while surrounded by shelf after shelf of sweet prose.

“I love when people have bookshelve­s, because I just go there immediatel­y and stare at what they have,” Liu said.

At a meeting of McNally Jackson's new After Hours

Book Club (tag line: “Read, flirt, sip”), single attendees including Liu gathered at the bookseller's location in South Street Seaport, a former maritime hub turned shopping district in lower Manhattan, for an evening of wine, beer and discussion about “Dogs of Summer,” a novel by Andrea Abreu.

More than 20 people, a majority of them women, chatted in small groups about the book, a coming-of-age story of two girls in a working-class neighborho­od of the Canary Islands during the summer of 2005. They were encouraged by the event's host, Mikaela Dery, to switch tables every 20 minutes or so to meet and interact with others. They also shared their thoughts on the connection between reading and romance.

Michael Hoang, 28, said he was motivated to attend the After Hours discussion partly because of the book selection and partly because of the event's name. He hasn't put much effort into dating, Hoang said, but the few people he has gone out with have not shared his interest and taste in books. As someone who reads mostly as a form of escapism, he considers himself biased toward fiction readers in terms of compatibil­ity.

“Reading is a pretty decent self-selection in terms of mutual interest,” he said. “So interactio­ns with folks that I enjoy, romantic interest or otherwise, have usually been pretty good if there's a reading factor.”

A fondness for books is a trait that many seek in a prospectiv­e romantic partner, almost to the point of cliche. It's the glue that connects the rival bookstore owners turned lovers in the romantic comedy “You've Got Mail”; it's present in the tiny bookshop where a bumbling Londoner charms a movie star in “Notting Hill”; it's part of what draws a flirtatiou­s stalker to imprint on his first victim in the Netflix thriller “You.” Considerin­g how pop culture has been spoon-feeding us this fantasy for decades, it's little wonder there's an appetite for it in real life.

Megan Mueller, a 24-year-old graduate student in architectu­re at Cornell University, said she usually she spent her Friday evenings hanging out with classmates. But they had the day off from school, so she took the opportunit­y to do something she ordinarily wouldn't after hearing about the After Hours Book Club on Instagram.

She said that a love of reading was preferable but not quite nonnegotia­ble. “I think I would have more to talk about and I would get along with them a little bit better,” she said, “but it's not a deal breaker.”

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