Beyond Bookstagram: 5 quiet novels that are worth reading

Discover 5 underrated books that deserve the spotlight but rarely show up on your Bookstagram feed. These hidden gems are worth your time.

May 20, 2025 - 15:30
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Beyond Bookstagram: 5 quiet novels that are worth reading

Let’s be honest—Bookstagram is beautiful. Aesthetically curated shelves, latte-topped book stacks, colour-coded spines, and glittery annotations make the platform a reader’s haven. But there’s a downside to the algorithm-driven, trend-following nature of it too. Amid the viral titles and TikTok-famous releases, thousands of quietly brilliant books go unnoticed.

These are the novels that don’t come with neon-sprayed edges or a Reese’s Book Club sticker. They’re not always new. They don’t trend. But they transform.

They sit quietly on bookstore shelves or in secondhand piles, waiting for the right reader to pick them up, not because they were hyped online, but because they deserve to be read. These books don't scream for attention; they whisper to those willing to listen. They contain stories that dig deep, characters that linger, and prose that slips under your skin before you realise you’ve been changed.

This list is a love letter to those overlooked masterpieces—books that remind us reading isn't just about keeping up with the internet, but about discovering stories that stay with us in silence.

5 books better than Bookstagram’s trending picks


1. The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy

Genre: Literary Fiction

Roy’s Booker Prize-winning debut isn't just a novel—it’s an experience. Set in Kerala, India, it weaves together a tragic tale of forbidden love, caste, family secrets, and colonial aftermath. The nonlinear storytelling may challenge you, but the lyrical prose and devastating emotional payoff are unforgettable.

Its complex structure and heavy themes make it less likely to be flaunted in flashy reels, but it’s one of the most poetic and powerful modern novels out there.


2. Stoner by John Williams

Genre: Literary Fiction

Not a book about drugs, but about William Stoner—an unremarkable man whose life, filled with quiet sorrow and academic pursuits, somehow becomes utterly profound. This is the kind of story that sneaks up on you and leaves you unexpectedly wrecked.

With its muted cover and subtle plot, Stoner doesn't scream "post me!"—but it is the definition of an underappreciated classic.


3. The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet by Becky Chambers

Genre: Sci-Fi / Space Opera

Forget explosive battles and alien invasions. Chambers gives us a slow-burn, character-driven sci-fi about found family, empathy, and identity. It’s joyful, thoughtful, and exactly what emotionally intelligent sci-fi should be.

Sci-fi with no drama or dystopia? Doesn’t trend. But it should, especially for fans of Ted Lasso or The Good Place in space.


4. A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki

Genre: Contemporary Fiction / Magical Realism

This novel connects a Japanese teenager’s diary, washed ashore after a tsunami, with the Canadian writer who finds it. Blending Zen philosophy, bullying, climate change, and quantum physics, Ozeki creates a spellbinding, layered narrative.

Complex themes and genre-bending styles don’t always make the algorithm happy, but this novel is a quiet giant.


5. So Long, See You Tomorrow by William Maxwell

Genre: Historical / Coming-of-Age Fiction

A novella of just over 130 pages, Maxwell’s tale of boyhood friendship, guilt, and memory packs an emotional punch. Told through the lens of an adult narrator reflecting on a tragic event from his childhood, it’s as poetic as it is poignant.

This one rarely makes the #shelfie rounds, but it’s a perfect pick for lovers of introspective fiction and short literary gems.


Final thoughts: Don’t read for the feed

Bookstagram and BookTok are fantastic for discovering buzzy new titles—but they’re not the only place great stories live. Hundreds of novels never trend, never chart, never sparkle in a flat lay—but they contain universes, emotions, and truths that are just as real, if not more.

So, if you’re tired of reading what everyone else is reading, take a chance on something lesser known. Explore the shelf with no spotlight. Open the pages of a book that no one’s talking about—but should be.

Because sometimes, the best stories are the ones you find off the feed.