The algorithm keeps feeding you the same ten books. Here’s how to actually make it work for you.
You open TikTok, and within three swipes, your For You page is flooded with the same viral books over and over. Fourth Wing. Shatter Me. Beach Read. The Housemaid. It feels impossible to escape. But here’s the truth: You can take control. This is how to make BookTok work for you, instead of the other way around.
It’s not a coincidence. It’s the algorithm doing what it does best: feeding you what everyone else is eating. Here’s the problem. When your For You Page gets flooded with the same ten books over and over, it stops being your page. It becomes a billboard. You feel like you have to read these books, not because you want to, but because everyone on the internet says you should. And somewhere along the way, you lose track of what you like.
I’ve been there. I used to read whatever was trending. It felt easier. Safer. But eventually, I realized I wasn’t reading for myself anymore. I was reading to keep up. I’d finish a book and think, “That was fine?” while everyone on TikTok gave it five stars, claiming it altered their brain chemistry. I started questioning my own taste. Was I missing something? Or was the hype just louder than the book?
So I stopped. And I learned how to make the algorithm work for me. Here’s how you can do it too.
Stop teaching the algorithm bad habits
Every time you watch a video all the way through, TikTok takes notes. Every time you rewatch a clip, it takes more notes. Even if you hated the book being recommended, TikTok doesn’t know that. All it knows is that you stayed.
Think of your viewing time as a vote. Each second you spend on a video is a vote saying, “Show me more like this.” So if you’re hate-watching a video about a book you don’t care about, you’re still voting for it. You’re telling TikTok that this content keeps you on the app. And TikTok’s only goal is to keep you on the app.
So you have to be intentional.
If a video pops up about a book you don’t care about—even if it’s viral, even if everyone is talking about it, simply scroll away. Fast. Don’t watch. Don’t linger. Don’t read the comments. Just move on. It almost feels rudem like you’re cutting off someone while they’re talking, but I promise you, it works.
On the flip side, when you find a video that you enjoy, such as a recommendation that feels right, a reviewer who gets your taste—like it! Save it. Watch it twice if you need to. Leave a comment if you have something to say. Again, these small actions tell TikTok, “More of this, please.”
It sounds simple, but most people don’t do it. They watch whatever shows up. They let curiosity or annoyance glue them to videos they don’t even like. And then they wonder why their feed feels out of control.
Remember, you have more control over your For You page than you think.
Find your people
The biggest BookTok creators are popular for a reason. They make entertaining videos. They have charisma. They tap into trends at exactly the right moment. But they’re also popular with everyone. That means their recommendations are designed to appeal to the widest possible audience.
A creator with two million followers has to recommend books that two million people could enjoy. That usually means mainstream, accessible, broadly likable books. Nothing wrong with that. But if your taste runs more specific, such as loving weird literary fiction, or niche horror, or romance with very particular dynamics, the big creators probably aren’t going to scratch that itch.
Instead, look for creators who read what you want to read. Here are a few to get you started:
@aminaisnotokay — She’s your go-to for cute romance reads. If you loved Shatter Me or The Woven Kingdom, she’s got you covered. She focuses on chemistry, banter, and that magical feeling of butterflies in your stomach.
@azhangia — A fantasy reader through and through. Think The Poppy War, The Fifth Season, Piranesi, Mistborn. If you want dense, beautiful, sometimes brutal fantasy with complex worldbuilding, start here!
@smitty1423 — An open-minded reader who jumps between genres. Sci-fi one day, fantasy the next, literary fiction after that. Great for when you want to branch out but don’t know where to begin. He reads like someone who just loves stories, period.
@mariannasreads — Romance, but on the darker side. Not for everyone, but perfect if you like tension, morally gray characters, and complexity in your love stories. She’s honest about content warnings, too.
@bunniereads — Horror. All horror. She breaks down sub-genres like psychological, slasher, gothic, cosmic, body horror, and folk horror. If you want to be scared, look no further. And if you don’t know what kind of horror you like, she’ll help you figure it out.
Here’s a tip: Once you find a creator you like, look at who they follow. BookTok is a big web. Good creators usually recommend other good creators. Follow the chain of connections. Before long, you’ll have a whole feed of people who feel like they’re talking directly to you.
Use Trends as Tools
BookTok trends can be useful if you treat them as starting points. The problem is when people treat trends as assignments. “This book is trending, so I have to read it.” “Everyone loves this, so I’m wrong for not loving it.” That mindset turns reading into a chore and your TBR pile into a homework list. But when applied correctly, BookTok enables you to discover more books than you could have ever imagined.
Two trends that actually work:
“Popular books that are worth the hype.” This is a goldmine. Why? Because the creator has to defend their choice. They can’t just say “read this.” They have to explain why it worked for them. That gives you real information to decide if it’ll work for you too. Maybe they loved the slow-burning romance. Maybe they connected with the main character. Maybe the prose hit right. Those details help you judge.
“Books for every type of mood.” These videos organize recommendations by feeling. “Books that feel like a rainy Sunday.” “Books that feel like being unhinged in the best way.” “Books that will ruin your life (affectionately).” Mood-based recs are often more accurate than genre-based ones anyway. Because let’s be real: Sometimes you want a sad book, sometimes you want an action-packed book, and sometimes you just want something weird.
Watch the videos with a notebook and write down titles that sound interesting. Then go read the summaries yourself. Check out the reviews on Goodreads or Fable. Read a sample if you can. Make your own decision.
One more trend worth watching: “Books I regret reading.” These videos are useful in a different way. Creators will tell you what didn’t land and why. Maybe the pacing was off. Maybe the ending fell flat. Maybe the representation was poorly handled. Their warnings can save you from wasting time on a book you’d end up disliking.
Train your algorithm with intention
Here’s a mindset shift that helped me: The algorithm is not a mind reader. It responds to the attention you give it. That’s it. So if you pay attention to BookTok videos, whether good or bad, it can’t tell the difference. It just assumes you want more of everything, so you have to be consistent.
For one week, try this: Every time you open TikTok, spend the first five minutes being selective. Like the videos you genuinely enjoy. Save the recommendations that excite you. Follow two or three new creators who fit your taste. And most importantly: Scroll past anything that doesn’t interest you within the first two seconds.
Don’t wait to see if it gets better. Don’t watch out of curiosity. Simply scroll. After a week, check your For You page. It won’t be perfect. The algorithm takes time to adjust. But you should notice a shift. Fewer viral books. More recommendations that feel relevant. Then do another week. And another. The algorithm learns from repetition. The more consistently you signal what you want, the more accurately it will deliver.
Build a “to-be-read” pile that’s actually yours
Your TBR pile should look like you, not like TikTok’s front page. Start saving videos intentionally. Create a folder in your saved videos called “To Read” or “Maybe Later.” Every time you see a recommendation that genuinely interests you, one that makes you think “oh, that sounds good”—save it there.
Then, once a week, go through that folder. Pick one or two books. Ignore the rest. You don’t have to read every book that shows up on your FYP. You don’t even have to read most of them. You just have to read the ones that actually call to you.
And here’s something liberating: You’re allowed to remove books from your TBR. If you saved a recommendation three months ago and you’ve felt zero desire to pick it up, delete it. Let it go. Your TBR isn’t a promise. It’s a list of possibilities.
The same goes for books you’ve already bought but haven’t read yet. If you’re not excited about them anymore, donate them. Sell them. Trade them with a friend. Reading should be a source of joy.
Somewhere along the way, between the viral videos and the must-read lists and the pressure to keep up, reading can begin to feel like an obligation. That’s when burnout happens, and that’s when you stop reaching for books altogether. So take a second. Remember why you started reading. Maybe it was to escape. Maybe it was to understand yourself better. Maybe it was because a book made you giddy at 2 AM when you couldn’t sleep.
The bottom line
I’m not saying BookTok is bad. It’s not. It got me reading again when I thought I’d lost the habit. It introduced me to books I never would have found on my own. And the creators I mentioned above? They’ve recommended some of my favorite reads of the past year.
But BookTok works best when you remember one thing: It’s a tool, not a boss.
You don’t owe anything to the algorithm. You don’t have to read Fourth Wing just because everyone else did. You don’t have to pretend to love The Housemaid if it wasn’t for you.
Read what you want. Scroll past what you don’t. Like the videos that light you up. And reclaim your For You page. The best book recommendation isn’t the one with the most likes. It’s the one that makes you say, “Wait, that sounds exactly like what I’ve been craving.” And only you know what is.
