Current:Home > ScamsPublic libraries reveal their most borrowed books of 2023 -GrowthProspect
Public libraries reveal their most borrowed books of 2023
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:59:19
At the end of every year, public libraries around the country assemble lists of the books most borrowed by readers. From Charleston, S.C. to Cincinnati, Ohio, from New Orleans, La. to Minnetonka, Minn., readers favored buzzy memoirs and novels adapted into TV miniseries.
"We had Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus as our number one checkout," says Emily Pullen. She manages reader services at the New York Public Library, the country's largest public library system, at least in terms of holdings, visitors and circulation.
You can see its most borrowed list here, which includes multiple titles by Colleen Hoover and Emily Henry.
Lessons in Chemistry, a bestseller last year, is set in the early 1960s. It's about a chemist dismissed because of her gender, who ends up hosting a popular cooking show. The novel was adapted this year into a series on Apple TV+.
Screen adaptations often drive popular novels; Lessons in Chemistry was also the most borrowed book at public libraries in Seattle, Wash., Boston, Mass., and Cleveland, Ohio.
But it was not even on the top 10 at the public library in Topeka, Kan. There, readers preferred mysteries and thrillers by C.J. Box, John Grisham and David Baldacci.
Not every U.S. library tracks its most borrowed books. And there's no one big list from, say, the American Library Association. "Most borrowed" lists can be sliced into lots of different categories: fiction, nonfiction, young adult, and books for children. Then there's audio and electronic books, as well as the physical ones.
On the app Libby, the number one most borrowed e-book nationally in 2023 was the memoir Spare, by Prince Harry Duke of Sussex. It was also the number one e-book at the Indianapolis Public Library.
"What surprised me really was the amount of checkouts in e-format compared to physical format," says Deb Lambert, who works at the Indianapolis library as director of collection management. "To see the stark numbers now, it's really drastic. It's like 5 to 1 e-checkouts to physical checkouts. And it looks like we might be heading even more towards 'e' than physical."
Spare also topped Libby's audiobook checkouts in nonfiction; Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros led in fiction.
The dramatic rise of library users reading electronically is not just limited to books, Lambert adds. Public librarians never used to know how exactly many people perused magazines in the reading rooms. Now thanks to e-magazines, they know down to the last reader, how incredibly popular The New Yorker is in Indianapolis.
"Our New Yorker e-magazine was actually the most checked out title of everything online, by a pretty good amount," Lambert says. In 2023, she adds, the magazine was bigger than Spare, even bigger than Lessons in Chemistry.
"Lessons in Chemistry had a total of 6,300 checkouts, and New Yorker magazine was 6,800 checkouts. It is interesting."
E-books and magazines have created a new set of challenges for public libraries when it comes to allocating budgets, but these librarians say they welcome new ways to assist people reading. No matter the genre or the format, they believe reading is for everyone.
If you are looking for your next book to check out, head over to Books We Love. Our site has more than 3,600 recommended titles, stretching back 11 years — along with links to help you find the books at your local libraries!
veryGood! (478)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Feds face trial over abuse of incarcerated women by guards at now-shuttered California prison
- Kourtney Kardashian Details What Led to Emergency Fetal Surgery for Baby Rocky
- Ex-top prosecutor for Baltimore to be sentenced for mortgage fraud and perjury convictions
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- 'Scrubs' producer Eric Weinberg to stand trial on 28 counts of rape, sexual assault: Reports
- New York senator won’t face charges after he was accused of shoving an advocate
- Who won 'Jeopardy! Masters'? After finale, tournament champ (spoiler) spills all
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Savannah police arrest suspect in weekend shootings that injured 11 in downtown square
Ranking
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Kansas women killed amid custody battle found buried in cow pasture freezer: Court docs
- 2nd human case of bird flu confirmed amid U.S. dairy cow outbreak
- Nicole Brown Simpson's Family Breaks Their Silence on O.J. Simpson's Death
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- North Carolina House pauses passage of bill that would ban masking for health reasons
- Barbie honors Venus Williams and 8 other athletes with dolls in their likeness
- Civil rights leader Malcolm X inducted into the Nebraska Hall of Fame
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Bayer Leverkusen unbeaten season at risk trailing Atalanta 2-0 at halftime in Europa League final
Wind towers crumpled after Iowa wind farm suffers rare direct hit from powerful twister
New NASA Mission Tracks Microscopic Organisms in the Ocean and Tiny Particles in the Air to Monitor Climate Change
Could your smelly farts help science?
5 dead and nearly 3 dozen hurt in tornadoes that tore through Iowa, officials say
Jessica Lange talks 'Mother Play,' Hollywood and why she nearly 'walked away from it all'
Biden's Chinese EV tariffs don't address national security concerns