Readers are taking in the âtrashâ
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Âé¶čĂâ·Ń°æÏÂÔŰBoulder scholar Katherine Little explores how Colleen Hoover and similar authors have taken over bestseller lists and social media
Colleen Hoover fans cheered last month when the film version of her novel Reminders of HimÌęwas at Universal Pictures and slated for February 2026 release. On the heels of the almost $150 million that It Ends with Us, a 2024 film based on another of Hooverâs novels, earned domestically, even non-fans or those not on TikTok probably know that a new Colleen Hoover film is a bigâand lucrativeâdeal.
Hoover and a cohort of bestselling authors that includes Ali Hazelwood, Emily Henry and many others have taken over the readingâand sometimes film-adaptationâworld one romance novel at a time. Their rise to literary fame writing novels that critics often dismiss as âtrashyâ can be attributed in large part to social media, especially BookTok, a subcommunity in the TikTok app dedicated to books. In fact, ââ is a sales metric that Publishers Weekly tracks, and cites seven of the 10 as being written by BookTok authorsâwho also happen to write romance or romantasy.
![Katie Little](/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/2024-11/Katie%20Little.jpg?itok=wzZ0YA2Z)
Katie Little, a Âé¶čĂâ·Ń°æÏÂÔŰBoulder professor of English, has taught a course called Trashy Books.
This raises the question: What is the enduring appeal of these âtrashyâ novels? Why are they so popular?
First, it helps to understand what exactly makes a novel âtrashy.â
âThere isnât one correct answer to what makes a book âtrashy,ââ says Katie Little, a Âé¶čĂâ·Ń°æÏÂÔŰ professor of English who has taught a course called Trashy Books, adding that the word âtrashyâ suggests these novels are in some way badâpoorly written, too sexy or simply a waste of time.
âItâs the marketing,â says Little. âUsually, somebody who is writing a trashy book understands themselves to be writing it for a particular audience looking for something fun to read, looking for romance.â
Some even argue that these novels are intentionally âtrashy,â and sales figures might back that up. thatÌę2022 adult fiction sales rose 8.5% from 2021, growth that was led by a 52.4% increase in romance book sales. So, the authors of these novels likely understand that they are not writing books for academic or high-literary audiences but are purposely writing what Little calls âbooks for fun.â
âBooks that we read for fun do have a bad-for-you aspect, and sometimes people arenât as aware of it because theyâre just looking for something fun,â Little explains. Books for fun are what some consider to be books that arenât challenging to readâa concept that has shadowed fiction almost since the first fiction was written.
Books for education
Through human history, books have been essential for formalâand even self-directedâeducation, and the prevailing idea has been that people could not consider themselves educated if they did not know how to read or if they didnât read often.
![cover of Reminders of Him by Colleen Hoover](/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/2024-11/Reminders%20of%20Him.jpg?itok=tNjvMXhi)
Colleen Hoover is one of the leading "BookTok authors," or authors who are beloved in the book-focused subcommunity of TikTok.
With the invention of the printing press and the growth of mass publication, âb±đłŠČčłŸ±đ and accessible means of entertainment, not just education. Even before the printing pressâas early as the first century AD and ânovels were generally regarded as the dumber, less respectable offspring of the epic poem. So, it wasnât a far leap to âtrashyâ books that are more about fun and entertainment than enlightenment.
And while it might be an exaggeration to claim that social media have had as significant an effect on peopleâs reading habits as, say, the printing press, the effect has nevertheless been significantâspecifically BookTok. A community within the social media app TikTok, BookTok is dedicated to all things booksâfrom book reviews to news about authors and new releasesâand made writers like Colleen Hoover into bestselling authors. BookTok content creators have embraced romance and romantasy novels that might be termed âtrashy,â helping to make the genres a driving force in publishing.
âWhatâs changed with social media and BookTok is that people are reading books, and they donât really read books the way they used to,â Little says. â[Readers] donât have this sense of âI should be reading a better book,â as in better written, more intellectually challenging.â
But what does BookTok mean for the future of reading? Little asks what would happen if people put similar effort into reading Shakespeare or other highly regarded authors that they put into BookTokâthe lighting, the recording, the influencing and tagging. about student reading abilities, several college professors expressed fear for future generations: Will they learn how to analyze, explain and understand difficult texts that are meant to challenge readers?
âI still think that books are the path to education,â Little says. âI understand people want to read for escape, but I also want people to read to use critical ways of thinking and knowledge.â
According to Little, one day Colleen Hoover and similar writers will fade in popularity, just as many authors have before her. âEven if writers exhaust the romanceâthe trashy books line of writingâpeople are so creative, theyâll come up with something else that will percolate in a different way.â
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