Social media (goodreads/tiktok/reddit)? Colleagues? Friends? Browsing the library/bookstore? Asking for recommendations from staff at libraries/bookstores?
BONUS: if you can remember, how did you find books you really enjoyed?
I realized a lot of my favorite book recs came from reddit. I was a subscriber of r/books and picked up some really good books there. Piranesi by Susanna Clarke is an example.
generally from friends recs, goodreads, but lately I’ve been having fun just checking the “tiny free library” in my neighborhood and taking whatever interests me. Read a few books that I never would’ve picked up otherwise that way.
I also ask people at work what they’re reading and then they usually follow up with what they actually would recommend reading
I realize you are asking books and not necessarily audiobooks but for audiobooks I follow a few good narrators that I know only do books I will like. This way I am almost always guaranteed a good book, and as a bonus I already know the narration quality will be perfect.
That’s a good method, I hate it when I find a new book I think I’ll be interested in and listen only to find that I can’t stand the narrator
Just because you couldn’t sit through Infinite Jest read by Gilbert Gottfried doesn’t mean the rest of us can’t
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Harry Potter was on my brother’s shelf. I read it because he liked it, and he hated reading. I love(d) reading, and I figured if he liked it it must be good. And an obsession was born, lol.
But I also typically just browse until a synopsis hooks me. I’m very guilty of judging books by their cover, too, so I often won’t even pick up a book if I don’t like the cover/title.
Along with what others have said, I consult the list of Noble and Pulitzer prize winners. Not all of them are great, as to be expected, but many of the best books I’ve ever read are on them.
For enjoyment, I’ll get recommendations from my hairstylist, believe it or not! Or I let Goodreads think for me sometimes. Other times, for work, it just depends on where my academic research leads - in the former case, kind of hit or miss, but of course for my job, whatever I end up reading is obviously going to be in my wheelhouse/relevant to my interests, anyway, so those are rarely intolerable!
Podcasts (interviews, recommendations), blog and newspaper reviews, references in other books I’ve read or from authors/personalities I like
I used to lurk /r/printsf and /r/weirdlit, and note down anything that sounded interesting. I also sometimes look at award winners + nominations. I guess I’ll have to make more of an effort now.
Searching around book stores (e.g. National Book Store, Booksale, Fully Booked, and other physical book outlets), Goodreads (including lists, and even checking reviews by S. Craig Zahler and Cardinal West), YouTube channels like Cardinal West, Jesse the Reader, etc., TV Tropes, and the occasional Reddit post and Telegram chat. I once even searched around my school’s library.
Usually advice from people that know me or similar books suggestions through online forums. When I try and pick award winning novels, even for genres I usually like, I usually end up disappointed.
Recommendations from people I know. Depending on who recommends them, I’ll pick them up. I also search for lists on google or “favorite book” polls/list on reddit. As long as I like the premise I’ll try it. If the first book in a series is a good read, I’ll continue the series, if not then I won’t. And of course books from authors I already knew when I liked their books.
I joined a book club that meets once a month. We pick one or two books to read for upcoming meetings. A lot of times we just brainstorm during the meeting to pick upcoming books.
I get a lot of books via Bookbub for cheap, I have my already existing favorite authors and genres, and otherwise I generally choose what to read seemingly at random.
Many times I aimlessly wrong around the bookstore down the road from my house (I live on the shore) and I pick something there. Most recently picked up Killers Of The Flower Moon, which has been an incredibly interesting read.
I now almost exclusively read books online. Check out Hoopla or ICloud. There are various ways to search fiction/nonfiction new/old releases read or audiobooks. I get free access via my local library.