How has the internet changed Book Culture?
How has the internet changed Book Culture?on Aug 21, 2019
Enjoyment was a big talking point, and all panelists seemed to concur that the internet's role in books culture was better suited for positive conversation and bridging gaps than for severe judgments. I think having this dichotomy of good or bad is reductive and not productive for what [Bustle's] audience wants to read about, Arreola said. Thinking about the Bustle audience is something I spend a lot of time doing....So many books come out every week and there's no way you can do justice to all of them. Not all of them are for our readership. Elaborating, she noted that she worked to make Bustle a space where you can come and talk about books that you love—a tactic made easier by the lack of women's lifestyle brands prioritizing books right now, she said, making exceptions for outlets like Elle and Real Simple.
The personal touch sometimes takes some of the critical edge out of books conversation online. Like many outlets, Bustle is fazing out professional book reviews, and Electric Literature did away with its reviews a couple of years ago now, Zimmerman said. Instead, these websites are prioritizing personal essays from a diverse group of writers, and both of the aforementioned sites have a women-focused editorial strategy.
Which social media platform was best for books discussion was a matter of debate. Arreola prefers Instagram, where Bustle has the most reach, as does Lee. That said, Lee added, Facebook groups have become a thing over this past year, because it becomes a forum discussion in a way that hasn't existed in a while. Epic Reads, she added, uses their page, Year of Epic Reads, as a space to present reading challenges every week, such as Read a book with your favorite color on the cover, or read a book with the word 'love' in the title. Straub, who was an early adapter to literary Twitter, still prefers that platform, as does Franklin: Twitter is for sure the Bad Place, he said, but I cannot stay away. Zimmerman pointed, reluctantly, to Facebook. We have a two-year-old piece get 200K hits over the past few days over a Facebook post. Facebook is late capitalism—once you succeed, you just keep succeeding, but it's really hard to break into it.
In terms of authors and book-related brands using social media well, some of the names mentioned included Kristen Arnett, Colson Whitehead, Roxane Gay, Elizabeth McCracken, Lauren Groff, Riverhead Books, and Belletrist. And Straub cited Saeed Jones—whose upcoming book How We Fight For Our Lives was a Buzz Book at this year's BookExpo—as a perfect example of how internet culture's effect on books has been for the positive. The gasp in the audience when Saeed Jones's name was mentioned is because of the internet, she said, and that's only good.

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