2017, Kathryn Perkins, "The Boundaries of BookTube", The Serials Librarian, Volume 73, Issue 3-4 (2017):
Some popular sites outside of BookTube are: Goodreads (a website dedicated to the online book community), Tumblr (aka “Booklr”), Instagram (aka “Bookstagram”), and Twitter.
2017, Lottie Moulster, "The Rising Trend of 'Bookstagram", The Galleon (University of Portsmouth), 30 March 2017, page 13:
Some of the bigger Bookstagram accounts that I follow are @quoththebooklover who has 15.3k followers, […]
2017, B. Conrad, "The Benefits Of Using #Bookstagram", Art Hive, Winter 2017, page 22:
Interact! Joining a book challenge, commenting on accounts, and meeting new bookstagrammers is a surefire way to get your bookstagram account noticed.
2018, Dorothee Birke & Johannes Fehrle, "#booklove: How Reading Culture is Adapted on the Internet", Komparatistik (2018), page 63:
On YouTube, users who describe themselves as BookTubers are vlogging about books and reading, on Instagram we find posters using hashtags such as #bookstagram, while Tumblr has a sub-community Booklr.
2018, Vidhya Thakker, "Bookstagram Community", Unread, March 2018, page 83:
Blogging was already something I did, but then I indulged in writing book reviews, which was the start of my journey on Bookstagram.
2019, Katie Shi, "Eye of the Beholder", The Dartmouth (Dartmouth College), 17 January 2019, page 6:
Over time, a popular bookstagram account often becomes less about what the person is reading and more about how carefully presented the photos are and how curated the account's theme is.
2019, Wilson Wong, "On Body Papers: Grace Talusan On Her Memoir", Tufts Observer (Tufts University), Spring 2019, page 9:
An introvert (like all good writers), Talusan feels weird about using Twitter and Bookstagram (Instagrams literally dedicated to books).
2019, Samantha Resnick, "The lovely fantasyland of bookstagram", The Student Life (The Claremont Colleges), 5 April 2019, page 5:
But for now, though, it's enough for me to feast on the glittery world of bookstagram.
2019, Karen Schechner, "Q&Q with Mike Gustafson, Co-Owner of Literati Bookstore", Kirkus Reviews, 1 May 2019, page 124:
Younger readers are passionate about new voices and new ideas but also about real, physical books and real, physical bookstores. They take photos of books. They create bookstagram accounts.
2020, Sam Miller, quoted in Linnea Wingerup, "Cheers To Being Queer (On The Internet!)", Peacock Magazine, Spring 2020, page 37:
Bookstagram has also married my two areas of study and interest: gender studies and creative writing.