Where to Make and Share Book Lists Online

Or, how to spread the book love

Claire Handscombe
4 min readMay 1, 2020

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Photo by Cathryn Lavery on Unsplash

Five years ago, I fell in love with an app. I knew giving it my heart was probably dangerous, that it was likely to change in ways that I didn’t love since I already thought it was perfect. Nevertheless, I jumped into The List App and helped to make it a bookish place, sharing lists of my favourite reading-related podcasts and facilitating group lists where we could share what we were reading each week.

A couple of years later, in September 2017, we got the email many of us had been sensing was inevitable. The List App, having undergone multiple reincarnations and been rechristened Li.st, was closing just three days later. “Is it possible to be astonished and yet at the same time not surprised?” those of us with a propensity to quote The West Wing might have said. We’d seen it coming, but it was still unbearably sad.

It’s hard to explain what this app meant to many of us — it was a community more than an app, a place more supportive than anything I’d come to expect online. Several of us have found each other online elsewhere — Facebook, Twitter, even Slack — but BJ Novak and his team trained us to think in lists, and we missed making them together and sharing them with each other.

Three years later, we still gather in a Facebook group, still mourn the loss of The List App, and we’ve Zoomed a few times during these weird times when people have been reaching out to their friends and communities for some semblance of much-needed connection

And although it’s not the same, there are other places online to make and share bookish lists — lists like “5 books that made me laugh” or “novels I recommend to everyone” or “my favourite Spain-set books”. I’m @bookishclaire on many of these apps, so find me if you’d like to play along.

Lili

Lili is similar to The List App, with many of the features we loved there. It’s easy to make lists on all topics and add a picture and a comment for each item on them. The lists are pretty and easily shareable on social media, and you can go back and add to them later, so they’re good for book projects in progress — for example, to record all the books you read as part of a challenge or in any given year.

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Claire Handscombe

Editor of WALK WITH US: How the West Wing Changed Our Lives; author of the novel UNSCRIPTED and of CONQUERING BABEL: a Practical Guide to Learning a Language.