Citations:BookToker

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English citations of BookToker and BookTokker

Noun: "a member of the BookTok community on TikTok"[edit]

2021 2022
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  • 2021, L A Cotton, “Acknowledgments”, in Off-Limits: An Opposites Attract Sports Romance (A Rixon High Novel), Delesty Books:
    And last but not least, to every reader, blogger, bookstagrammer, and booktokker who has read, reviewed, shared, or shouted out about this story – thank YOU!
  • 2021, Sarah Carnat, "A Resurgence In Reading And Why You Should Take Part", For All The Girls Magazine, June 2021, page 6:
    Ava Jules, Jenn Im, among many other book-oriented influencers ('bookstagrammers', 'booktubers', 'booktokers') are either gaining attention from the growing popularity of reading, or are using their platform to raise the popularity of reading.
  • 2021, Ava Culoso & Katie Kalhorn, "The Next Literary Frontier: Book Reviews Fly Off the Shelves on TikTok", The Hoya (Georgetown University), 1 October 2021, page B3:
    The accessibility aspect of BookTok is critical to boosting the virality of certain titles, according to prominent BookToker and Georgetown University student Allison DeRose (COL '23).
  • 2021, Debbie Alty, "How BookTok Contributed to the Lockdown Book Boom", aAh! Magazine (Manchester Metropolitan University), Issue #5 (November 2021), page 38:
    You could even argue that BookTokers have unearthed a marketing strategy which publishers have been attempting to discover for years.
  • 2021, Morgan Collier, "Make Reading Cool Again", The Good Life (Syracuse University), Fall 2021, page 34:
    BookToker Pauline Juan (@thebooksiveloved), who has over 430,000 followers on TikTok, discusses how reading is an entirely individual, which may be why it is resonating with so many people.
  • 2021, Elizabeth Foster, "Tik, Tik... BOOM!", Kidscreen, October/November 2021, page 44:
    Callaghan says she ended up removing some BookTokers from her shortlist because the language or content of some of their videos didn't feel like the right fit for her middle-grade audience.
  • 2021, Margot Harrison, "BookTok Boogie", Seven Days, 22 December 2021 - 29 December 2021, page 36:
    I became a BookToker. And I learned a terrible secret about myself: I love making TikTok videos.
  • 2021 May 30, Stephanie Hammett, “Romance writer ‘mildly obsessed with fairy tales and retellings’”, in The Spokesman-Review, 138th volume, number 356, Spokane, Wash., page D1:
    Local romance and New York Times bestselling author Katee Robert has always had a devoted fanbase, but, this past year, her readership has grown to include an ever-increasing number of “BookTokers,” that is, TikTok users and accounts devoted to reading recommendations.
  • 2022, Wyatt Bandt, "BookTok: More Than A Trend", Shelf Unbound, February/March 2022, page 109:
    In part, the success of BookTok can't be separated from the quarantines caused by the COVID-19 pandemic; many BookTokers saw surges in followers as people began consuming more digital and print content.
  • 2022, Elle Kennedy, “Acknowledgments”, in Good Girl Complex: An Avalon Bay Novel, St. Martin’s Griffin, →ISBN:
    []; every single reviewer, blogger, Instagrammer, Booktokker, and reader who has shared, supported, and loved this book.
  • 2022 January 24, Stephanie Merry, “On TikTok, crying is encouraged. Colleen Hoover gets the job done.”, in The Boston Globe, volume 301, number 24, page C10:
    "She puts her characters through the most insane situations," says Kendra Keeter-Gray, a 23-year-old Los Angeles-based BookToker and associate producer. [] "I feel like we all just want to feel something so badly," says 19-year-old college student and BookToker Samawia Akhter.
  • 2022 February 1, Lara Mellett, “Inside the world of BookTok: Where social media meets the printing press”, in Trinity News, volume 68, number 6, page 14:
    BookTokers aestheticise not only the reading lifestyle, but the books themselves, with many members of the community choosing to buy books from-new.