Join our newsletter for 10% off at the Penguin Shop

The best Twitter feeds for book-lovers

·
min read
··
Image of bird from Twitter logo holding a red book, against a blue background.

Twitter might seem a curious place to turn to for book lovers. What use, after all, is 280 characters when you're used to 500,000 or more? It’s noisy and brash and unruly but, amid the maelstrom of political trash-talking and hyperactive celebrity fandom, Twitter can also still be brilliant – especially when it comes to books. Here are 18 of our favourite feeds, from authors to libraries to sources of inspiration for you next read.

Paulo Coelho

Paulo Coelho’s tweets are like the warm hand of a wise friend on your shoulder (‘stop looking for happiness in the same place you lost it') as well as the perfect accompaniment for fans of his work (The Alchemist, The Winner Stands Alone).

Spark Notes

Why, you could not be blamed for asking, has a company that helps schoolchildren prepare for exams got more than 230,000 followers? Because they’re bonkers and clever and totally hilarious. It’s mainly a lot of book-related memes and oblique literary jokes. Like this, just before Christmas: ‘Give your significant other what they really want this holiday season: a cursed portrait in the attic that will grant them eternal youth and beauty, all at the expense of their soul.’ 

Greek choruses had the right idea. Show up, offer commentary on the drama, leave.

— SparkNotes (@SparkNotes) January 26, 2021

Black Girls Book Club

In 2014, the Pew Research Centre published data that revealed that the most likely person to read a book was a black woman with a degree. You need look no further for proof of this than London’s own Black Girls’ Book Club, founded in 2016 by friends Melissa Cummings-Quarry and Natalie Carter. They regularly host huge events with headliners such as Roxanne Gay and Malorie Blackman. Plus, their gif-heavy Twitter feed is pure joy.

Book Cover Reveal

Introducing Living While Black by Guilaine Kinouani ?

The Essential Guide to Overcoming Racial Trauma. Finally, we have guide on how to overcome racial trauma using self-care.

GET INTO IT, Sis

It’s not everyday survive, it’s everyday thrive pic.twitter.com/a4MCCiFs7I

— your favourite authors favourite book club (@bg_bookclub) February 1, 2021

Irvine Welsh

Foul-mouthed, straight-talking and with his Leith accent stubbornly undented by his move to America, this is the Irvine Welsh that you can read between the lines in Trainspotting. His Twitter rants have become – to his army of followers, at least – legendary, whether they’re about politics, Scotland or the state of sandwiches on trains. He also tweets about books.

Love this album. There’s something about the isolation of lockdown that really pulls the singular voice of a great singer-songwriter into focus. John Darnielle is one of the best with his beautiful, sparse, quirky ballads. pic.twitter.com/p06dfe6aWm

— Irvine Welsh (@IrvineWelsh) February 2, 2021

Susan Orlean

If you’re a writer, or want to be one, Susan Orlean has the Twitter feed you need. The New Yorker writer and bestselling author (The Orchid Thief and The Library Book) dispenses writing hacks and advice to her 313,000 followers and discusses her own writing process and literary musings – with plenty of humour bundled in.

Just a few self-flagellating observations to share with you: https://t.co/rJKdM48s5p

— Susan Orlean (@susanorlean) February 1, 2021

Gary Shteyngart

American book writer and satirist (and consultant on TV hit Succession) has a reputation for getting beneath the skin of his homeland, reading its hypocrisies, insecurities and ironies with alarmingly hilarious accuracy. On Twitter, the Lake Success author is smart, funny and occasionally, quite political.

Harsh writing advice: you have to save your receipts. Some think an expenses journal is enough, but they will never be real writers.

— Gary Shteyngart (@Shteyngart) February 1, 2021

London Review of Books

The most successful literary publication in Europe, the LRB has been covering books, culture and ideas since 1979. It’s mostly a portal through which to find the magazine’s best long-form essays which, honestly, can be a minefield because they’re pretty much all exquisite, which is why the publication has lasted so long. 

Our lives together
Are not easy, but they are
Our lives together.

‘Old World’, a poem by Robert Crawford in the latest issue:https://t.co/xUTBdupnOk

— London Review of Books (@LRB) February 1, 2021

Margaret Atwood

The two-time Man Booker Prize winner is a poet, novelist, critic, essayist, inventor, teacher and environmental activist. So expect all that in her tweets, as well as book recommendations, crisp reflections and, occasionally, helping young literature students with school essays about her books.

Haha, TipTop Paper Products was already taken. I did get a letter from Canadian tax authorities back in 1977.. “Is there really a Mr. Toad?” https://t.co/6HwwbTGGSi

— Margaret E Atwood (@MargaretAtwood) February 2, 2021

Marian Keyes

Irish novelist Marian Keyes is as warm, witty and insightful on Twitter as she is on the page. Follow for a glimpse into the humourist’s life and mind – as well as some great book recommendations.

Are you watching The Investigation? Oh my god ??? I've just finished episode 3 and its so sad and beautiful and moving and heartbreaking. The actors playing Kim Walls parents are wonderful (I've always loved Rolf but the mother is also great)

— Marian Keyes (@MarianKeyes) January 30, 2021

Reese’s Book Club

Yes, the actress Reese Witherspoon. Since she launched her book club in  2017 it has become an industry phenomenon. Like Oprah in the US and Richard and Judy in the UK before her, Witherspoon is fast becoming one of the few tastemakers who can catapult a book into the bestseller lists. It has also become an essential space for stories about women, by women.

Three generations, two chicken shacks, and some big family secrets revealed…. The December @ReesesBookClub pick, #TheChickenSisters by @KJDellAntonia is a charming, feel-good story about the kind of bonds & rivalries only sisters can share. ❤️ pic.twitter.com/i9dlogon07

— Reese Witherspoon (@ReeseW) December 1, 2020

Robert Macfarlane

On Twitter, as in his books, Macfarlane writes gorgeously about nature and climate, people and places. Each morning the Underland author expounds a new ‘word of the day’ (do you know what a ‘caesura’ is? Or a ‘blashie’?), and recommends articles and books for anyone with a soft spot for the natural world.

“O the mind, mind has mountains in it...”
Gerard Manley Hopkins

Great Gable in volcanic mood, a little after dawn.
Seen from Low Fell, north-west Lakes, yesterday.
? John Macfarlane pic.twitter.com/v9ric7LpgW

— Robert Macfarlane (@RobGMacfarlane) January 3, 2021

New Yorker Fiction

The New Yorker has been publishing short stories from the world’s best writers for more than sxity years. From John Cheever to Roald Dahl, Dorothy Parker to Shirley Jackson, it is the world’s pre-eminent playground for modern short fiction (serious, humorous, experimental, the lot). This is where to indulge your short story compulsion.

On the February New Yorker Fiction Podcast, Hisham Matar reads and discusses "One Minus One" by Colm Tóibín, which appeared in a 2007 issue of the magazine. https://t.co/PqgABa0MaU

— New Yorker Fiction (@NYerFiction) February 1, 2021

The Big Green Bookshop

The Big Green Bookshop is a little independent bookshop in Hastings. But for what it lacks in size it makes up in voice – it’s a Twitter giant. Co-owned by Simon Key, its primary function is to sell books by post, so expect plenty of deals and promotions framed by Key’s cuddly sense of humour. They also host a wildly-popular book club while every Wednesday is ‘Buy a Stranger a Book Day’ in which followers are offered the chance to either ask for a book or offer to buy one for somebody else.

Hello, we are open. Sorry i'm late, satnav wasn't working.

— Big Green Bookshop (@Biggreenbooks) February 2, 2021

Dolly Alderton

Dolly Alderton is one half of the wildly-popular pop-culture podcast The High Low and author of the hit memoir Everything I Know About Love. On Twitter, she's consistently hilarious on everything from dating apps to pop culture to her allergy to The Queen’s speeches.

Penguin Random House

Not one, but seven feeds to follow from the Penguin Random House family. Ebury, Michael Joseph, Penguin General, Allen Lane, Penguin Random House Children’s (Puffin and Ladybird), Transworld and Vintage are our publishing houses, each creatively and editorially independent but all with the same goal: to seek out and publish the best writing talent from around the world. Follow to stay up to date with what they have planned.