Move over dating apps — Gen Z is now having meet-cutes at book club
The poll of 2,000 Americans who attend a book club found that a surprisingly high number (23%) have met someone they're interested in romantically at their club.
Interestingly, men were significantly more likely to report having met a romantic interest at a reading group compared to women (38% vs. 16%).
Conducted by Talker Research and commissioned by ThriftBooks, the study found that 44% of respondents would rather meet a romantic partner at their book club rather than on a dating app.
And out of all generations, Gen X (45%) and Gen Z (47%) were most likely to opt for a book club meet-cute over a dating app.
However, more than half of book club members (56%) confessed they like to keep their book club membership a secret from others in their life, with men being notably more likely to feel this way compared to women (69% vs. 48%).
Investigating how much reading they're getting up to, the study found that book club members read 10 books, on average, in the last year.
Twenty-eight percent of respondents said that they found it difficult to meet others with similar literary taste prior to joining a book club.
And respondents' top reasons for joining reading groups, according to the study, were to read new books (68%), socialize (63%) and to make new friends (59%), with Gen Z and millennials (both 61%) being more likely to join book clubs in order to forge friendships, compared to older generations.
Seeing where they meet, 42% of book clubs meet in-person, 11% meet online and 43% meet via a combination of in-person and online gatherings.
Nearly all respondents (93%) agreed that meeting with a reading group has been therapeutic and 98% said it's improved their mental health.
'Not only are reading groups having a significant impact on readers' romantic lives and friendships, they're also hugely beneficial for book club members' mental health,' said Barbara Hagen, vice president of marketing at ThriftBooks. 'It's incredible to see that readers are joining reading groups for the literary aspect as well as the social and wellness benefits.'
According to the survey results, Gen Z's favorite genre to read with their book clubs is romance (44%) while millennials (42%), Gen X (45%) and baby boomers (54%) all enjoy mystery books the most.
When asked what they're currently reading with their group, popular books respondents cited include 'Fourth Wing,' 'Gone with the Wind,' the Harry Potter series, 'The Book Thief,' 'The Midnight Library' and 'The Outsiders.'
And uncovering their all-time favorite group reads, popular titles listed were 'Little Women,' 'Pride and Prejudice,' 'The Help' and 'To Kill a Mockingbird.'
Most readers (63%) said that social media has influenced them to read more in the past year and 57% follow book influencers on social platforms.
Looking at where they're most active on social media, Gen Z respondents spend the most time interacting in book communities on TikTok (60%) while millennials (62%), Gen X (64%) and baby boomers (54%) are most active on Facebook.
'In the survey, we found that readers are meeting in-person, online, in hybrid in-person and online settings and even on social forums. They're also reading a diverse span of literature from recently-released titles to the classics and making friends and romantic connections along the way,' said Hagen. 'If you're curious about or interested in joining a book club, we encourage you to do it. There's a group out there for everyone.'
POPULAR FAVORITE BOOK CLUB READS
'Little Women'
'Pride and Prejudice'
'The Help'
'To Kill a Mockingbird'
'The Nightingale'
'The Silent Patient'
'The Women'
'Where the Crawdads Sing'
'A Child Called It'
'It Ends with Us'
'Moby Dick'
'Milk and Honey'Talker Research surveyed 2,000 Americans in book clubs; the survey was commissioned by ThriftBooks and administered and conducted online by Talker Research between April 17 and April 24, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Oh no! Hypocritical celebrities abandon US, blaming Trump. What will we do now?
If celebrities, or anyone else, want to flee the US because a Republican is president, by all means, good riddance. I've never been so mad at a political party or a politician that I felt like leaving my country. I love America too much to even consider it. But a slew of celebrities have done that. Late night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel just announced during an appearance on the "The Sarah Silverman Podcast" on Aug. 7 that he obtained Italian citizenship. Kimmel alluded that President Donald Trump and the political climate he's created were contributing factors. It's not clear if Kimmel plans to move to Italy full time. "What's going on is as bad as you thought it was going to be," Kimmel said to Silverman during the podcast. "Way worse," Silverman said. "It's so much worse. It's just unbelievable," Kimmel said about America's political climate. "Like I feel like it's probably even worse than he would like it to be." Kimmel joins other celebrities who fled America and blame Trump Kimmel joins several high-profile celebrities who have sought refuge elsewhere because of Trump. It's a fascinating example of how self-aggrandizement, celebrity and perception do not always equate to reality, common sense and gratitude. If anything, it fuels hypocrisy. People magazine reported in 2024 that the comedian and former daytime talk show host Ellen DeGeneres and her wife, Portia de Rossi, had moved to England. DeGeneres confirmed in July that Trump's return to the White House prompted her move across the Atlantic. In March, comedian Rosie O'Donnell announced in a TikTok video that she moved to Ireland with her child. She's working on obtaining Irish citizenship. In the video, she said she moved because she didn't think she'd have equal rights under Trump. If these celebrities' ties to our nation were so weak that they could be severed because Americans elected a Republican president, how much did they care about the United States to begin with? Were they ever really freedom-loving Americans? Subscribe to my newsletterhere and get exclusive access to columns like this one – before anyone else Celebrities who abandon the US are hypocrites Celebrities are often hypocritical when it comes to their real lives, political beliefs and their careers. They'll claim they're anti-gun but make films with jarring violence and hire armed security for themselves. They'll tell other Americans how to vote − and it's mostly for Democrats − but live a lifestyle free of the economic and financial pressures that regular Americans face. Celebrities such as Miley Cyrus, Amy Schumer, Cher and Whoopi Goldberg threatened to leave America if Trump got elected in 2016, but they are still here. Perhaps they at least realize how silly it is to abandon their country because millions of their fellow citizens democratically elected a Republican into office. Perhaps they realized how hypocritical it was to live a life of luxury, thanks to America's free market principles, and then spit in its face because an election didn't go the way they wanted. When O'Donnell says she fled to Ireland out of fear that Americans like her would lose their rights, what does that really mean? Trump has signed no executive orders and Congress has passed no laws that strip any Americans of their fundamental rights. Federal anti-discrimination laws remain in place to protect all Americans, including the LGBTQ+ community. It's strange for someone like Kimmel, with a reported net worth of about $50 million, to flee the United States because of a supposedly difficult political environment. He still has a platform on network TV to ridicule Trump and other conservatives who don't support Kimmel's ultraprogressive opinions. Trump, meanwhile, is doing what 77 million voters said they wanted in November. He's secured the southern border, brought illegal immigration under control, bolstered the economy and is working to secure peace in the Middle East and Ukraine. If celebrities, or anyone else, want to flee the United States because a Republican is president, by all means, good riddance. If they can't appreciate the country that paved the way for their wealth and fame, and they want to believe they are victims of a difficult political climate, they deserve to wallow in their hypocrisy in a country that is a distant second to America's greatness. Nicole Russell is a columnist at USA TODAY and a mother of four who lives in Texas. Contact her at nrussell@ and follow her on X, formerly Twitter: @russell_nm. Sign up for her weekly newsletter, The Right Track, here.


Boston Globe
2 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Climate change is ‘enshittifying' our lives
I'd momentarily forgotten. For four days in a row this month, we, like millions of Americans across the Midwest and Northeast, had been living under a haze of poor air quality. For four days, the sky was an undifferentiated gray and the sun stayed blurry behind a film of smog. And for four days, every breath we took outside felt ever so slightly chalky, coating the inside of our mouths with a touch of residue. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up That is the residue of forests located thousands of miles away, burned up in the massive wildfires raging across Canada this summer. The sheer scale of these conflagrations is hard to wrap your head around: Over Advertisement On Aug. 4, for example, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection issued an Advertisement These fires are not natural disasters. They're a predictable consequence of climate change, caused by the burning of fossil fuels. As Mike Flannigan, the research chair for fire science at Thompson Rivers University, Advertisement None of this is breaking news. But that is what has been scaring me the most this summer. Two years ago, when the smoke from the Canadian wildfires was this intense, it was a huge story. And I don't just mean in the media, where the image of New York City's But it turns out we can, in fact, accept these smoke-filled skies as normal. This time around, people have barely mentioned the air quality around us. Yes, it's been unpleasant — in fact, the experience for my family has been harder this summer. We have a 3-month-old now, and it's been an extra challenge to be cooped up with him inside all day, unable to take him on a stroller walk to help him fall asleep. But it's unpleasant in a way that already is becoming just 'the way things are.' There's a viral post that gets Advertisement Just as our experiences online are being steadily enshittified by Big Tech companies, our time on this earth is being steadily enshittified by Big Oil companies and their climate-denying allies in the federal government. They are driving both the increasingly common extreme weather disasters happening across the country and the smaller but still saddening degradations to our lives: summers filled with weeks too hot to enjoy; winters with fewer snow days; walks in the woods marred by more ticks; and, yes, increasingly frequent negotiations between parents and kids about the safety of going outside to play. Humans are incredibly adaptable. But our ability to just keep trucking while the world around us gets shittier and shittier, while the water comes closer and closer to a boil, as the frog knows, has its downsides. Ultimately, we let our son join his friends. But we allowed for just 20 minutes of play before I went to retrieve him. As we were walking, hand in hand, back up the road to our house, he looked up at the hazy sky and said, 'The sun is less shiny today. But it's still pretty.' I looked up, too. 'Yeah, I guess it is,' I said.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
10 bizarre things people secretly love the smell of (but won't admit)
These scents are 'gross' to most people—but secretly adored by many. Let's face it — we all have that one 'gross' smell we weirdly enjoy. Sure, society might wrinkle their nose, but to us? It's pure nostalgia. Or maybe we're just a little strange. Either way, you're in good company. I stumbled across a hilarious thread asking: 'What's a smell you enjoy that most people consider bad?' The answers were a delightful mess of 'Wait, what?' and 'OMG, SAME.' Here are some of my favorites: 1. Puppy Breath It's not for everyone, but a few brave souls admitted they love that sweet, milky little puff of air from a baby pup. (Personally, I thought everyone loved this, though?!) 2. Fresh-Cut Hay & Saddle Leather If it smells like a barn, apparently it's heaven to a lot of folks. Horse sweat, cow manure, even chicken coops—pure comfort scents for some. 3. Gasoline & Exhaust Fumes Yes, people actually like the smell of gas stations. And old car exhaust? "Smells like freedom." (This smell makes me want to barf!) 4. The 'Frito Feet' Phenomenon If you know, you know. Dog paws = corn chips. And some people can't get enough of it. 5. Skunks (but just a hint) A whiff of skunk in the distance is oddly pleasant for a surprising number of people. Not roadkill level—just a faint breeze of eau de Pepe Le Pew. 6. Your Own Farts We're going there. Multiple people shamelessly admitted that their own brand doesn't stink. "It's not bad when it's yours!"… allegedly. 7. The Post-Rain Asphalt That wet, steamy asphalt smell after a rain shower? Some folks said it smells like childhood memories. 8. Play-Doh & Mimeograph Paper Who needs essential oils when you can crack open a can of Play-Doh? Also, a shoutout to those who miss the blue-ink chemical bliss of old-school mimeograph machines. 9. Bleach in the Bathroom One person called this the 'smell of clean.' Another said it's their equivalent of a spa day. Who are we to judge? 10. Welding Metal, Shoe Polish & Blown-Out Candles An entire mini-category of industrial and oddly specific smells that people admitted to loving. And let's be honest, it's not just smells that spark these kinds of 'wait, what?' moments. The foods we eat, the strange laws we never knew existed, even how we act at the beach—there's no shortage of quirky things we think are totally normal (but really aren't). If you enjoyed this, you might also get a kick out of reading about the foods Europeans eat that Americans find bizarre, the strange U.S. laws that are somehow still a thing, and how most Americans think they have perfect beach etiquette—but 92% are kidding themselves. Solve the daily Crossword