Reader Tools for Viral Books & Romantasy Goblins
The Gilt List Reader Toolkit
for BookTok, Romantasy, and Enormous TBRs
A curated set of apps, sites, and trackers for readers who keep seeing the
same book everywhere, can’t remember who recommended what, and are
permanently one click away from another 600‑page romantasy. These are the tools
I actually use alongside The Gilt List — to track, to find, and to
survive viral books without losing the plot.
Jump to the Toolkit
Built for mood readers, romantasy lovers, spreadsheet girlies, and anyone
who has whispered into the void “please be a 5 star read”.
Track Your Reading
Apps that won’t make your TBR feel like an unpaid internship
Goodreads is fine until it isn’t. If you want stats, mood graphs, or a
bookshelf that doesn’t look like 2011, these are the trackers worth your time.
Use them with The Gilt List, not instead of it. I break down how some of these apps work here.
StoryGraph
StoryGraph
is a data‑forward Goodreads alternative with mood charts, pacing stats, and
eerily good recommendations once you’ve logged a decent stack.
Great if you read across viral fiction, romance, thrillers, and romantasy.
Pair it with our
Goodreads alternatives guide.
Hardcover
Hardcover
is a prettier, more social tracker with list‑making and gentle
“your friends loved this” energy. Good if you want a visual shelf and discovery with
less chaos than BookTok.
TBR Bookshelf
TBR Bookshelf
was built with romance readers in mind — ideal if your shelves are mostly
spice, tropes, and things the algorithm swore you’d love.
Bookmory
Bookmory
is for readers who want a private, quiet tracker — no social features, just logs,
a reading calendar, and a sense of what you actually finished this year.
Bookly
Bookly
is a habit app disguised as a reading tracker. It times your sessions, predicts
when you’ll finish, and nudges you to choose pages over doomscrolling.
The Gilt List
Use the apps for stats and shelves; use
our reviews
to decide whether a book is actually for you: spice, tropes, tone,
and who will love it (or hate it) on purpose.
The trackers keep receipts. The Gilt List tells you whether that viral book
is worth six hundred pages of your very finite life.
Find What to Read Next
When you’ve finished the latest viral thing and need your next obsession
These are the places to go when you know the energy you want
(“dark, swoony, slightly unhinged villain love interest”) but don’t know
which book will scratch it.
romance.io
romance.io
is a search engine for romance and romantasy where you can filter by
genre, steam level, tropes, and content warnings at the same time.
Perfect for “morally grey, open door, no cheating, fantasy romance”
hunting.
Trope Trove
Trope Trove
is a browse‑friendly site organised by trope, genre, and series, great for
wandering until something grabs you by the throat.
What Should I Read Next?
WhatShouldIReadNext.com
lets you type in one book you loved and get readalikes based on other readers’
favourites lists. Fantastic post‑BookTok‑hangover tool when you want
“more like this, please.”
Smart Bitches Book Finder
Smart Bitches Book Finder
is a long‑running romance brain‑trust tool for searching by themes and
archetypes when you want recommendations with actual genre literacy.
Coming Eventually
We’re building a resources that will connect you with indie darlings by trope. Watch this space.
Read More, Spend Less
Library sorcery, KU drama, and other ways to feed the beast
Your taste might be expensive; your reading life doesn’t have to be.
These are the services that make viral and romantasy reading vaguely
sustainable.
Libby
Libby
is the library app that lets you borrow ebooks and audiobooks with your
library card, often including popular BookTok titles.
Hoopla
Hoopla
lets you borrow digital books and audiobooks instantly from participating
libraries, often with no waitlists — very good for romance and SFF.
The Gilt List Romantasy Hub
If what you really want is a curated path through the shadow daddies,
morally grey menaces, and cosy fantasy romances,
our romantasy hub
keeps everything in one place.
Use Libby and Hoopla like a responsible adult; use KU like a 3am PJ cookie monster with no
boundaries; use The Gilt List so you know what you’re getting into.
Spreadsheet Goblin Corner
For readers who cope by color‑coding their feelings
If you love a good spreadsheet or coloring sheet these free trackers/print outs are worth exploring.
-
Elaine Howlin’s 2026 Reading Tracker – a free, robust
spreadsheet for tracking books, stats, and goals. Grab it from
Elaine’s tracker post.
-
Chapter Adventure Reading Challenge Sheet – perfect for
prompt‑based challenges and seasonal TBR games. Get it from
Chapter Adventure’s site.
-
DIY Gilt List layout – Download our PDF with 30 day tracker, book coloring sheet, book list to track tropes & emotional devestation, and and extra little review tracker .
Is Something Missing?
We’re trying to create the biggest, most epic list of resources ever. If you have something to share, or know something worth being here, contact me! melissa@thegitllist.com or fill out the contact form.
Contact Me
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slightly worse and your reading life slightly better.