Which Ebook Reddit Subreddits Recommend Indie Novels?

2025-09-03 11:46:26 237

4 Answers

Ella
Ella
2025-09-04 15:52:37
I tend to be practical about this: r/indieauthors is the most obvious hub for indie recs, and r/selfpublish is useful for authors and curious readers to interact. For deals and quick finds I check r/ebooks and r/kindle, plus r/KindleDeals for promos. Smaller genre subs like r/fantasy or r/romance are surprisingly good for indie suggestions because readers there call out lesser-known titles frequently.

When I post asking for recommendations I keep it short: say what you just finished, what you liked about it, and mention "open to self-pub/indie"—that little line pulls in indie-friendly suggestions. Also, if you find a book you love, leave a short review somewhere; indies live and die by word of mouth, and a five-minute note helps more than you’d think.
Lucas
Lucas
2025-09-05 17:15:41
Okay, here's the short roadmap I wish I'd had when I was hunting indie ebooks late into the night: start with r/indieauthors and r/selfpublish. Those two are my go-to for discovering self-published novels because authors post new releases, readers share hidden gems, and there are often weekly threads for promos. r/ebooks and r/kindle are broader—great for deal hunting and seeing what indies are being talked about in the wild. For deals specifically, I check r/KindleDeals and r/KindleFreebies; they often list limited-time free or cheap indie titles.

If you want genre-specific indie recs, don't ignore the big fandom subs like r/fantasy, r/scifi, r/romance, and even smaller spaces like r/horrorlit. People regularly recommend indie favorites there, and you’ll see more honest reader reactions than in pure promo threads. My trick: use Reddit search with keywords like "self-published" or "indie" plus your genre, then sort by top of all time to find consistently recommended books. A quick sidebar peek at any book-related subreddit usually points to similar communities, too.

One last practical tip: be mindful of rules. Some subs require a flair or specific promo day; others ban self-promotion outright. If you’re asking for recs, say what you liked recently (e.g., 'Wool' or 'The Martian' if you want hard sci-fi that crossed over) and what you don’t like. That gets better suggestions and keeps the convo friendly.
Una
Una
2025-09-05 23:21:52
I'm more of a community-builder type of reader, so I approach this by mapping the ecosystem rather than pinning everything to a single subreddit. First layer: r/indieauthors and r/selfpublish for direct author posts and honest back-and-forth. Second layer: deal and discovery hubs like r/ebooks, r/kindle, r/KindleDeals, and r/KindleFreebies—perfect for catching limited-time promos and seeing which indie books are getting traction. Third layer: genre communities (r/fantasy, r/scifi, r/romance, r/horrorlit) where indies bubble up organically in recommendation threads. I often dive into comment threads to see if readers who liked an indie also liked certain tropes or pacing, which tells me whether it’s a fit.

If you're an author or someone promoting a book, read the rules before posting: some subs allow promo only in weekly threads, others need flair like 'Self-Pub' or 'Promo'. If you just want to find gems, use search terms like "self-published" or "indie" combined with your genre, then filter by top or most upvoted. Crosscheck on Goodreads or a BookBub deal page for extra reviews—Reddit is great for discovery, but a mix of platforms gives you context. I once found an indie gem by following a comment chain from r/fantasy to a small newsletter, and it felt like finding a secret bookshop online.
Addison
Addison
2025-09-07 16:07:23
I get a little obsessive about hunting indie novels and Reddit is where I find the oddball treasures. Personally I lurk in r/indieauthors and r/selfpublish for discovery and r/ebooks for broader chatter. When I want curated picks I head to r/BookSuggestions and sometimes r/Books—people put up mini-reviews and tag them as self-published or indie. There are also niche deal subs like r/KindleDeals and r/KindleFreebies that surface temporary promos, which is how I snagmed a couple of amazing indie reads without spending much.

Pro tip: when you post asking for recs, give three recent titles you liked and one thing you disliked. That tiny bit of context gets people to stop recommending the same mainstream titles and point you to indie works that actually match your taste. And if an indie author recommends their book, check the comments for honest reader responses before buying.
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