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  1. I've just finished reading The Women, by Kristin Hannah, and wow... what an amazing, powerful book. I knew nothing about the veterans of the Vietnam war and I'm so glad I read it.
    @bookstodon #TheWomen #KristinHannah #fiction

  2. I've just finished reading The Women, by Kristin Hannah, and wow... what an amazing, powerful book. I knew nothing about the veterans of the Vietnam war and I'm so glad I read it.
    @bookstodon #TheWomen #KristinHannah #fiction #bookstodon

  3. Public libraries’ top check-outs in 2025 include ‘The Women’ – NPR

    Searching the stacks at a Miami-Dade Public Library on July 19, 2023, in Miami.
    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Book News & Features

    Genre fiction and female authors top U.S. libraries’ most-borrowed lists in 2025

    December 29, 20256:00 AM ET, Heard on All Things Considered

    By Neda Ulaby 3-Minute Listen Transcript

    Searching the stacks at a Miami-Dade Public Library on July 19, 2023, in Miami. Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    The Women was among the most checked-out books in U.S. public libraries this year, making top 10 lists in library systems as far-flung as those in Clawson, Mich., Lawrence, Kan., Flathead County, Mont., and the entire state public library system of Hawaii. It was also the year’s most-borrowed ebook on the public library app, Libby.

    The bestselling novel by Kristin Hannah follows a U.S. Army nurse from the front lines of the Vietnam War to a family deeply divided about the war and her service. The Women, which came out in 2024, was also extremely popular among public library patrons last year, topping numerous most-borrowed lists, and included in NPR’s “Books We Love.”

    “I shouldn’t be surprised, but I kind of was, that The Women was No. 1 yet again,” says Harold Escalante, the assistant director of collections and access for the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library in North Carolina. “[Hannah] is a powerful storyteller. She’s really good. She’s engaging, she sucks you in with her story, and they’re big books.”

    As it happens, books by women dominated most-borrowed library lists in 2025. All of the top 10 books on Libby were by women. Three of the top 10 titles for the country’s biggest public library system, in New York City, were part of a bestselling romantasy series by Rebecca Yarros: Fourth Wing, Iron Flame and Onyx Storm. Yarros’ books also showed up on most-borrowed lists from the Boston Public Library, and public libraries in Boone County, Ky. and Kern County, Calif. Other female authors with multiple titles on most-borrowed lists across the country included Freida McFadden, Holly Jackson and Emily Henry.

    Liz Moore’s The God of the Woods, a 2024 thriller about the disappearance of a teenager from an Adirondack summer camp showed up on numerous most-borrowed lists, including those in Island Park, N.Y., at the Timberland Regional Library in Washington state, and in Lombard, Ill. Other popular novels this year included The Wedding People by Alison Espach, Just for the Summer by Abby Jimenez and Atmosphere: A Love Story by Taylor Jenkins

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Public libraries’ top check-outs in 2025 include ‘The Women’ : NPR

    #2025 #Books #FemaleAuthors #GenreFiction #MostBorrowed #NationalPublicRadio #NPR #PublicLibraries #ReadingTitles2025 #TheWomen #TopCheckouts
  4. The Most Popular Books In US Public Libraries in 2025 – Book Riot

    Check Your Shelf

    The Most Popular Books In US Public Libraries in 2025

    What were the most popular books checked out in US libraries in 2025? Here are the top fiction and nonfiction titles across 40 libraries.

    Kelly Jensen, Dec 19, 2025

    This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

    What are the most popular library book checkouts from 2025? While there is no definitive answer, we have a number of tools we can pull from to make some educated guesses. Among them are the increasingly popular “Your Library Wrapped” social posts that circulate this time of year.

    Looking at 40 different top library book checkout lists from big and small public libraries across the USA, here are some of the most popular books of the year. What makes looking at public library book popularity fun is that it is year-agonistic, meaning that books published this year might sit alongside books published several years ago. Genre books tend to see more top books lists in libraries than in other outlets who compile or write about the year’s best or top books.

    Of particular note this year, books published in 2024 that earned some kind of accolade, that were part of a major celebrity book club, or that had adaptation news arise landed among the most popular nationwide. This isn’t surprising–and we can likely thank ebook access for helping circulate more of these in-demand titles to patrons. When a book is popular, though ebooks are much more costly for libraries than print copies, additional ebook purchases can often be done quicker than print. We’ll see this when we look at next year’s roundup of most popular books, too, as one of the largest distributors of print materials to public libraries went under this fall.

    Other interesting trends this year include seeing genre fiction among the most popular titles. They’re a library staple that can too often be overlooked in “best of” lists from non-library outlets. Authors who have immense and long-time followings saw their titles on these lists, such as David Baldacci and Louise Penny. This year, we also saw popular BookTok authors also rise through the ranks, such as Rebecca Yarros and Freida McFadden. Meanwhile, only one library had a Sarah J. Maas title among its most circulated, a change from the last few years.

    White authors tend to dominate in these lists, but the lists across the 40 libraries surveyed are more varied than just what’s at the top. This is, of course, a reflection of how publishing is still a predominantly white industry, and the books that tend to get bigger publicity and marketing around them are by white authors. It’s also worth addressing here that some of the biggest genre writers are long-time writers, so hitting the top of the most-circulated list as a newer genre writer can be tough. Again: that doesn’t mean they aren’t here or don’t circulate in libraries. It means they’re not at the tippy top.

    Check Your Shelf

    Sign up to receive Check Your Shelf, the Librarian’s One-Stop Shop For News, Book Lists, And More.

    By signing up you agree to our terms of use.
    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

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    The good news is that when an author of color sees their book receive publicity and accolades, that attention is reflected in the library. One of this year’s biggest circulating titles? It’s James by Percival Everett. While it did not make the cut off for the most borrowed title of the year, James McBride’s The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store landed on several most circulated lists this year, too.

    Another element to consider in looking at these lists is the role that the digital platforms for library ebooks play themselves. Some collections will simply have more copies of particular titles than others, allowing for more checkouts of said titles; hoopla, for example, allows many library users to borrow titles simultaneously, so when something is popular, more people have access at once than they do through a service like Libby (this is part of why hoopla has become unsustainable financially for libraries, particularly over the last year). Likewise, whatever books are being promoted on those digital platforms via book lists or readalike lists–aka, what to read if you liked a particular title or movie–can impact what people borrow. It was interesting looking through hundreds of the most popular titles and seeing some surprises bubble up on the “top ebook” checkout lists. As you’ll see below, though, the top checkouts in print and ebooks have been collapsed into single lists.

    Whether a major metropolitan library, a midsize suburban library, or a teeny rural library, here’s what Americans were picking up across the country in 2025, based on 40 different public library lists.

    The Most Popular Fiction in US Public Libraries in 2025

    This list includes combined ebooks and print books. Some libraries create separate lists of top checkouts in each, but even in those separate lists, there’s a lot of crossover (The Women by Kristin Hannah was on both for the same library, for example). It makes sense to collapse them into a broader “fiction” category. Only a couple of libraries had separate “genre” lists in their wrap ups; those titles were not included. This reflects only the top lists which mixed fiction genres. The below is only for adult fiction and does not include the YA book which appeared on numerous lists as among the most circulating: Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins, which was on four lists.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: The Most Popular Books In US Public Libraries in 2025

    Tags: 2025, Book Riot, Books, Fiction, Great Big Beautiful Life, James, Non-Fiction, Onyx Storm, Public Libraries, The God of the Woods, The Women, U.S. Public Libraries
    #2025 #BookRiot #Books #Fiction #GreatBigBeautifulLife #James #NonFiction #OnyxStorm #PublicLibraries #TheGodOfTheWoods #TheWomen #USPublicLibraries
  5. The Most Popular Books In US Public Libraries in 2025 – Book Riot

    Check Your Shelf

    The Most Popular Books In US Public Libraries in 2025

    What were the most popular books checked out in US libraries in 2025? Here are the top fiction and nonfiction titles across 40 libraries.

    Kelly Jensen, Dec 19, 2025

    This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

    What are the most popular library book checkouts from 2025? While there is no definitive answer, we have a number of tools we can pull from to make some educated guesses. Among them are the increasingly popular “Your Library Wrapped” social posts that circulate this time of year.

    Looking at 40 different top library book checkout lists from big and small public libraries across the USA, here are some of the most popular books of the year. What makes looking at public library book popularity fun is that it is year-agonistic, meaning that books published this year might sit alongside books published several years ago. Genre books tend to see more top books lists in libraries than in other outlets who compile or write about the year’s best or top books.

    Of particular note this year, books published in 2024 that earned some kind of accolade, that were part of a major celebrity book club, or that had adaptation news arise landed among the most popular nationwide. This isn’t surprising–and we can likely thank ebook access for helping circulate more of these in-demand titles to patrons. When a book is popular, though ebooks are much more costly for libraries than print copies, additional ebook purchases can often be done quicker than print. We’ll see this when we look at next year’s roundup of most popular books, too, as one of the largest distributors of print materials to public libraries went under this fall.

    Other interesting trends this year include seeing genre fiction among the most popular titles. They’re a library staple that can too often be overlooked in “best of” lists from non-library outlets. Authors who have immense and long-time followings saw their titles on these lists, such as David Baldacci and Louise Penny. This year, we also saw popular BookTok authors also rise through the ranks, such as Rebecca Yarros and Freida McFadden. Meanwhile, only one library had a Sarah J. Maas title among its most circulated, a change from the last few years.

    White authors tend to dominate in these lists, but the lists across the 40 libraries surveyed are more varied than just what’s at the top. This is, of course, a reflection of how publishing is still a predominantly white industry, and the books that tend to get bigger publicity and marketing around them are by white authors. It’s also worth addressing here that some of the biggest genre writers are long-time writers, so hitting the top of the most-circulated list as a newer genre writer can be tough. Again: that doesn’t mean they aren’t here or don’t circulate in libraries. It means they’re not at the tippy top.

    Check Your Shelf

    Sign up to receive Check Your Shelf, the Librarian’s One-Stop Shop For News, Book Lists, And More.

    By signing up you agree to our terms of use.
    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

    Thank you for signing up! Keep an eye on your inbox.

    The good news is that when an author of color sees their book receive publicity and accolades, that attention is reflected in the library. One of this year’s biggest circulating titles? It’s James by Percival Everett. While it did not make the cut off for the most borrowed title of the year, James McBride’s The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store landed on several most circulated lists this year, too.

    Another element to consider in looking at these lists is the role that the digital platforms for library ebooks play themselves. Some collections will simply have more copies of particular titles than others, allowing for more checkouts of said titles; hoopla, for example, allows many library users to borrow titles simultaneously, so when something is popular, more people have access at once than they do through a service like Libby (this is part of why hoopla has become unsustainable financially for libraries, particularly over the last year). Likewise, whatever books are being promoted on those digital platforms via book lists or readalike lists–aka, what to read if you liked a particular title or movie–can impact what people borrow. It was interesting looking through hundreds of the most popular titles and seeing some surprises bubble up on the “top ebook” checkout lists. As you’ll see below, though, the top checkouts in print and ebooks have been collapsed into single lists.

    Whether a major metropolitan library, a midsize suburban library, or a teeny rural library, here’s what Americans were picking up across the country in 2025, based on 40 different public library lists.

    The Most Popular Fiction in US Public Libraries in 2025

    This list includes combined ebooks and print books. Some libraries create separate lists of top checkouts in each, but even in those separate lists, there’s a lot of crossover (The Women by Kristin Hannah was on both for the same library, for example). It makes sense to collapse them into a broader “fiction” category. Only a couple of libraries had separate “genre” lists in their wrap ups; those titles were not included. This reflects only the top lists which mixed fiction genres. The below is only for adult fiction and does not include the YA book which appeared on numerous lists as among the most circulating: Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins, which was on four lists.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: The Most Popular Books In US Public Libraries in 2025

    Tags: 2025, Book Riot, Books, Fiction, Great Big Beautiful Life, James, Non-Fiction, Onyx Storm, Public Libraries, The God of the Woods, The Women, U.S. Public Libraries
    #2025 #BookRiot #Books #Fiction #GreatBigBeautifulLife #James #NonFiction #OnyxStorm #PublicLibraries #TheGodOfTheWoods #TheWomen #USPublicLibraries
  6. Die Frauen
    1939

    „L’amour, l’amour“

    Zur letzten Vorführung im „Kino International“ vor der langjährigen Sanierung gab es den Klassiker „Die Frauen" (The Women) von George Cukor in der Reihe „Mongay“ zu sehen.

    👉 boxd.it/6vNGtp

    #DieFrauen #TheWomen #Film #Filmfan #FilmReview #Filmastodon #FilmMastodon #SoilentFilm #KinoInternational

  7. Die Frauen
    1939

    „L’amour, l’amour“

    Zur letzten Vorführung im „Kino International“ vor der langjährigen Sanierung gab es den Klassiker „Die Frauen" (The Women) von George Cukor in der Reihe „Mongay“ zu sehen.

    👉 boxd.it/6vNGtp

    #DieFrauen #TheWomen #Film #Filmfan #FilmReview #Filmastodon #FilmMastodon #SoilentFilm #KinoInternational

  8. Having a soak, eating chocolate, smoking, reading the paper *and* waiting for a phone call-Talk about multitasking!
    #TCMParty #TheWomen

  9. Having a soak, eating chocolate, smoking, reading the paper *and* waiting for a phone call-Talk about multitasking!
    #TCMParty #TheWomen

  10. More films need technicolor fashion shows in the middle of them, dammit!(youtu.be/N4HJxkWulCA)
    #TCMParty #TheWomen

  11. More films need technicolor fashion shows in the middle of them, dammit!(youtu.be/N4HJxkWulCA)
    #TCMParty #TheWomen

  12. It’s a damn shame that Norma Shearer didn’t make too many more films after “The Women” because she’s an absolute delight on screen
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen

  13. “The first rule of rich, white lady fight club is don’t talk about rich, white lady fight club…”
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen

  14. Nothing like drinking moonshine with the gals 😵‍💫
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen

  15. Virginia Weidler appeared in nearly 50 films between 1931 and 1943 when she retired at age 16. I’ve never seen her give a less than stellar performance
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen

  16. Adrian designed all of the costumes for the film and he really leaned into dramatic and surrealist designs
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen #Fashion

  17. Adrian designed all of the costumes for the film and he really leaned into dramatic and surrealist designs
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen #Fashion

  18. Her hairstyle only makes sense when she’s wearing her jaunty, little 1930s hat
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen

  19. Her hairstyle only makes sense when she’s wearing her jaunty, little 1930s hat
    #MusComEnt #TheWomen