Subway Book Review

@subwaybookreview

Photographer, Curator, Bookstagram
Underground in New York City 2014-2022 Created by Uli Beutter Cohen @theubc⁣ Get my book BETWEEN THE LINES 👇
Followers
Posts
Engagement
Updated: 4 hours ago Refresh
Quick Actions
Profile link copied.
Pictures & Media Stats

Top Instagram Posts of Subway Book Review

Subway Book Review’s Most liked posts from the last 30 uploads.

Highlights

Media Stats – Instagram Posts

Recent 30 posts with likes and comments overview.

Media overview
Published Caption Likes Comments
I talked to Claire the founder of subwaysocialclub at Clinton—Washington station about The Power of Strangers by mrjoekeohane (I’m actually in that book which Claire of course didn’t know—only the subway gods can plan this kind of match made in heaven). xo theubc 2022-02-14 22:43:27 I talked to Clair.. 737 -35% 34 +63%
NEW YORK — Xochitl: “I am a lifelong Brooklynite, author of the novel Olga Dies Dreaming, and I’m a lifelong subway rider. I have to say that the subway has seen better days. I used to think of the subway as a mangy lover that you could at least rely on. It wasn’t the nicest looking, but at least it was there. Infrastructure-wise, our Mayor has not been the best friend to commuters — he has been the mangiest of all lovers — but here we are, at the dawn of a new era, who knows (laughs). The book I’m reading is ‘My Government Means to Kill Me’ by Rasheed Newson. It comes out in August and this is an advanced copy. It takes place in the 80s in New York and follows a queer, Black man named Trey who leaves a family of privilege to move to the city. It’s his coming-of-age story as an openly gay man during the AIDS crisis and I love that it weaves the personal and the political together. Trey also takes us to the bathhouses, the Chelsea Hotel, and so many places that were part of the fabric of New York that have kind of been erased. In the 90s, I worked for a gallerist who, when he couldn’t pay me anymore, horse-traded me to the framing store next door and eventually I became a luxury wedding planner. I was barely making $5 but we’d go to this restaurant L’Orange Bleue where Heath Ledger would hang out. It was a wild and interesting time. The best part about being a wedding planner was that I met all these amazing people, like Manny, my old delivery guy, and I got this understanding that the ecosystem was actually quite flat. The power brokers needed their vendors. What is so emotionally hard about COVID is to see how all the local businesses are impacted and which workers are put most at risk. It’s a good thing to keep in perspective. Where am I headed today on the subway? I’m going to the Container Store. I have these disorganized closets filled with dog food and I need to get them in order. This year I’m taking major steps toward smaller ambitions. I’m aiming for low-level mastery at adulting.”
xochitltheg #mygovernmentmeanstokillme #rasheednewson #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity 🎤📷 theubc 2022-01-06 22:13:18 .. 1,138 -0% 24 +15%
NEW YORK — Michael: “It’s Sunday, it’s raining, and I’m headed to the Upper East Side to get drinks. I started a new job at a law firm and I’m trying to fight off the Sunday scaries because I don’t know what I’m doing yet (laughs). I’m 28 and just finished three years of law school. Originally I wanted to work in politics but that’s a little dirty. I’m doing corporate law now and hopefully I won’t be defending anyone sketchy and I can sleep at night. I’m fifty pages into Anxious People and it’s quite funny. It’s about a bank robber who attempts to rob a bank but doesn’t actually do it and instead chaos ensues. Given the title, I assume that the cast of characters are anxious people in the way they go about life. I’m an anxious person. I just moved back to New York, I just started a new job, I’m waiting for the subway, time is always moving, I’m always late. How do I deal with my anxiety? I run a lot to work off all the drinking (laughs). My advice is to run as fast as you can.”
M_billotti #AnxiousPeople #FredrikBackman #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity 📝📷 theubc 

*Michael only briefly removed his mask for the photo. Stay safe, mask up 🗽 2022-01-02 19:48:32 .. 5,403 +374% 106 +409%
NEW YORK — Saffeya: “Right now what’s on my mind is becoming rich and free. I work in the city, I do real estate, and I’ve been in the business for six years. What does being rich and free look like? I can travel and go to the beach whenever I want, I have a nest egg and I can retire. I want to be able to wake up in the morning and play piano. I am classically trained and love playing Mozart, Debussy and Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata. To me that’s pure wealth, having control over your time. I’m only a quarter of the way into Harris Rules and what I have learned is that 1) success doesn’t happen overnight 2) you gotta have a goal and something you’re striving for and 3) once you get there don’t forget the people who have helped you along the way — and definitely read. The more you know, the more you grow.”
saffeya_h #harrisrules #abundance #happynewyear #newyorkcity #subwaybookreview cc nytimes #sundayroutine 📝📷 theubc 

*Saffeya only briefly removed her mask for the photo. We mask up on the subway 🗽 2021-12-31 22:19:26 .. 493 -57% 0 -100%
NEW YORK — Arianna: “I’m the author of ‘What Would Frida Do? A Guide to Living Boldly’ and I’m the editorial director of The TODAY Show which is a new job. It’s weird starting a new job virtually in the pandemic but it’s super exciting, too. I live in Long Island City and this time last year I got my puppy Leo because things were rough. I was living alone and it was hard to be at home 24/7. Leo came home with me on December 26th — I was the cliché person who got a pandemic puppy — and here we are, a year later. Leo travels with me everywhere, including the subway. He brings me joy, purpose, and he shakes up my routine. I recently picked up this book to re-read it because I love it so much. I’ve been reading Tia Williams for a while now and was first drawn to her books because they’re romantic comedies that are literary and star Black women. In this book, the female character is an author and I was hooked the minute I opened it. It’s about two Black authors who are kind of like archnemeses in the literary world but we find out that they have a history and there’s a love story. It’s just delicious and so well written. It’s one of my favorite books of the year. It’s been harder and harder for me to find time to read these days, and after the roller coaster that was 2021, this New Year’s Eve will find me super low key with more rom-coms like this one…and lots of wine.”
ariannagab #sevendaysinjune tiawilliamswrites #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity 📷📝 theubc 

*Arianna only briefly removed her mask for the photo. Stay safe New York. 2021-12-27 20:57:42 .. 1,053 -8% 23 +10%
NEW YORK — Melanie: “I’m a resourceful, scrappy, first-generation American. My family moved back to Ireland when I was twenty. It was lonely at first and I worked a lot of odd jobs out of fear that I had no safety net but being here by myself also allowed me the freedom to decide what I wanted to do next. I moved to New York where I met a lot of friends who also didn’t have family nearby. It’s comforting to take care of each other. Maria, the main character in Joan Didion’s Play It As It Lays, didn’t have a community and I’m aware of how lucky I am. Maria is divorced and recovering from an illegal abortion. She is the antidote to a man saying, “You should smile more.” I think women are expected to be people-pleasers and perhaps that’s why I gravitate towards women who have cracked the code on not giving a shit. It’s powerful. I see myself in Maria’s frustration and also in her love for Kate, her daughter from her first marriage. My sister is ten years younger than me and I used to rock her to sleep and read her bedtime stories. There’s a scene where Kate wraps her arms around Maria’s legs to keep her from leaving and my sister would do the same thing. I’d have to peel each little finger of hers off my calves.“
_girlsarentfunny #joandidion #playitasitlays #newyorkcity #subwaybookreview #repost 📝📷 theubc 2021-12-24 02:08:05 .. 1,653 +45% 16 -23%
Majorly excited to see Between the Lines in today’s nytbooks !!! Thank you to everyone who has bought a copy already. If you haven’t yet, it’s an excellent holiday gift for yourself & yours 💛✨ cc theubc simonandschuster simonbooks 2021-12-12 22:11:10 Majorly excite.. 790 -31% 13 -38%
Big news, New York!! I’m opening a pop-up bookshop at Union Square station in a former newsstand December 1st to 12th. My little shop is filled with holiday favorites and must-reads that are featured in Between the Lines. While you're there, you can also gift a book that's on the wishlist of incarcerated people at Rikers, which will be delivered through the NYPL’s Jail & Prison services. You can find me inside Union Square station: take the entrance by Whole Foods on 14th & Broadway and you’ll see me past the turnstiles when you walk towards the L train. I’m open Monday to Friday 10a to 7p and Saturday, Sunday 10a to 5p. Giant thanks to my collaborators mta strandbookstore nypl for making this amazingness possible. See you underground, xo Uli 

*My mask was only briefly removed for the photo. I always mask up on the subway and hope you do too!

📷 ozan_marcel cameo kamauware 2021-12-01 19:19:32 Big news, New .. 5,377 +371% 127 +510%
NEW YORK — Zibby: “I’m a mom to four kids and motherhood is the biggest psychological experiment of all time. I was a psychology major in college and it’s the most useful thing I’ve done because kids keep changing constantly. As soon as you’ve mastered one thing they’ve moved on to the next. There’s no complacency in parenting. I think that's why moms like to help each other because what else are we going to do with all this knowledge? I host a podcast called Moms Don't Have Time to Read Books which is a daily literary podcast where I interview authors. I have also written two anthologies, two children books, and I have a memoir coming out next summer. I'm really busy. Maybe it’s because I’m a native New Yorker but I think it’s in my genes (laughs). Before motherhood I would’ve said that I don’t like change, but I’ve been forced to like it. My trick is to just stay where my feet are and focus on the day. This book is all about change. Smile by Sarah Ruhl is an amazing memoir about losing the ability to smile after she had a traumatic birth that gave her Bell’s Palsy and froze half her face. She talks about what it’s like when you can’t show your emotions and the importance of having people to turn to who know you deep down. It doesn't matter to them what your face looks like because they know what you're feeling and thinking. Sarah’s book reminds me that life is about keeping love in your life and not prioritizing all the external stuff.”
zibbyowens #smile sarah_ruhl_ #change #motherhood #newyorkcity momsdonthavetimetoreadbooks #subwaybookreview 📝📷 theubc 2021-11-30 03:04:20 .. 442 -61% 4 -81%
NEW YORK — Regan: “I am Mississippi Choctaw and the name of our tribe is People of the Rivers. We practiced fishing and we navigated the Mississippi River with all of its smaller creeks and brooks. I came to Manahatta when I was 17 for the same reason as many people, which is to participate in resource extraction and to further my career. It took me a long time to find my Indigenous community, which is honestly ridiculous considering that Manahatta has the largest urban Indigenous population in all of the occupied United States. Once I found my people at the Indigenous Kinship Collective, it transformed the way I interact with the city completely. Now I see it as it is my duty to provide a service to the city. Johanna Fernández, a colleague of mine and a bad-ass professor, wrote this book which talks about history in a way I’ve never seen. The Young Lords helped ground my own ideologies of what it looks like to be anti-colonial and anti-capitalist in the epicenter of global capitalism. The Young Lords provided healthcare, education, housing, and food without any reliance or dependency on the settler state or government and they did it so successfully that they were eventually strategically destroyed by the FBI. What I advocate for is for white people to get off our land and people of course don't love hearing that. Nonetheless, it’s the reality. The other thing is to be an accomplice and to let Indigenous and Black people lead the way. When we call for mutual aid or community care, participate but let those actions be led by Black and Brown people. Listen to us as the authorities. Be willing to be wrong and to get corrected.” 
phaggot.planet #theyounglords #joannafernandez indigenouskinshipcollective #subwaybookreview 📷📝 theubc 2021-11-27 00:41:52 NEW YORK.. 1,042 -9% 2 -90%
NEW YORK—Justin: “Do I know what my purpose is? You could say that I help people to come home to their bodies. I went to school for psychology and I played rugby so I’m trying to bring those two together by being a personal trainer. I don’t see it through a lens of vanity because getting back into my body brought me out of a dark place. People like to shy away from discomfort but what I’m learning is that some stress can help you to get better. Each time we lift a heavier weight we become more equipped to take on what’s next. During the height of the George Floyd protests, I ended up hosting a protest at my old middle school and from there I started a nonprofit dream.shift.inc that connects youth in the community with much needed resources. Today I’m on my way to the New York Sports Club on 23rd Street. The pilates instructor there who has been practicing for forty years suggested I read When Things Fall Apart by Pema Chödrön because I just finished The Celestine Prophecy which is about how to make connections between different events in your life. Both of these books are teaching me to be uncomfortable. With this book, what has stuck with me is the concept that when things fall apart, remember that whatever is happening in your head is just a fleeting thought. Be present during your journey. Keep the future in mind, but you gotta be in the present to take the steps to get there. That’s the most important thing.”
jay_shifty dream.shift.inc #whenthingsfallapart #pemachödrön #newyorkcity #subwaybookreview 📝📷 theubc 2021-11-22 01:26:15 .. 2,266 +99% 59 +183%
NEW YORK — Mickey: “Usually I’m on the subway to get to Paper Magazine where I’m the editor-at-large. I think if I can survive these delays, these rats, and all of this craziness then I can survive anything. I started at Paper as an intern and I’ve been working there for almost 30 years. Many people in publishing and fashion love to go from one job to another but I'm the opposite—I've also lived in the same apartment for 29 years. There's a certain kind of satisfaction and reward that comes from that kind of long-term situation, similar to how some people prefer being monogamous rather than whoring around all over town (laughs). I love to learn history from people who have made history. This book is called Some Royalties and a Prime Minister: Portraits from Life by Princess Marthe Bibesco. It was published in 1930. She was an amazing writer whose stories are all about social climbing and the royals she met along the way. Marthe was beautiful and had an affair with Queen Marie’s husband King Ferdinand. She loved to be right at the heart of the action. She also had an affair with the Crown Prince of Germany during World War I when Germany invaded Romania which is not a good way to make yourself popular in your own country. I think New Yorkers are wary of social climbing but at the same time, this city is an incredible place to randomly meet fascinating people. There is something about the energy, and the creativity, and the people here that is just unbelievable. I hope for a coronation one day and for many dashing princes to throw themselves at my feet.” 
askmrmickey #royalty #marthebibesco #newyorkcity #subwaybookreview papermagazine 📝📷 theubc 2021-11-20 03:41:21 NEW.. 574 -50% 13 -38%
NEW YORK - Maliha: “I’m in New York for the NFT convention. As an artist, author, and activist I see crypto as a radical tool to advance human rights. I created 456 assets that generated 10,000 NFTs featuring female activists, artists, scientists, and coders. The world of NFTs is not just a space just for white guys in a hoodie (laughs). NFTs and cryptos will bridge the digital divide and through that gender inequality. Activism can lead to burnout but books keep me sane. I’ve been reading poems by Afghan women and they often compare themselves to a trapped bird. Many of them are anonymous so I don't even know their names. Right now, I’m re-reading The Bookseller of Kabul which is about a bookseller and his family and the daily issues they face. It was written over 20 years ago and the first time I read it, it felt like fiction because at the time, women in Afghanistan had different rights. Now, everything has changed—it’s been over 40 days since Afghan girls had access to education. I’m Pakistani and I think it’s our duty to share information about this loss of human rights regardless of our own ethnicity. I have dedicated my life to women’s rights and one of my goals is to bring 100,000 women into the crypto world in 2022. This isn’t just a dream, I have a roadmap to get there and a team that’s working incredibly hard. What’s the opposite of gatekeeping? Smashing down the damn door.”
maliha_z_art #thebooksellerofkabul #asneseierstad #nft #newyorkcity #subwaybookreview 📝📷 theubc 2021-11-18 03:28:41 .. 643 -44% 13 -38%
NEW YORK — Kosha Dillz: “My first rap name was Kosher Dill and everyone made fun of me. Then I was KD Flow, and in 2005, after I got out of jail and got sober, I became Kosha Dillz. It felt liberating, like hip hop, and I made my first vinyl that year. Something analogue—like vinyl, CDs, tapes, and books—is an authentic experience with a piece of art. This book I’m reading is called Talking to Strangers and as an artist, I feel like I’m professionally talking to strangers all the time. For such a long period of my life, I never left my neighborhood in Edison, New Jersey. I was in one city and then I was in jail, never going anywhere. When I was 27, I went on my first tour and really saw America. I was so nervous! Getting out of New Jersey was the hardest part. Once I was in the middle of America, it was so much easier. In the book, Gladwell talks about what it’s like to be driven by fear. That’s how people have judgement and misconceptions about who you are. When cops pull someone over, they have a full relationship with that person before they have any idea about who they are. When you go on a date, you google them to look them up and you have a whole relationship with them before you even talk to them. Miscommunication is the problem of our entire world. We grow up with the views we’re raised with until we get out of our nests and start meeting other people. But some people stay in their tunnel vision and celebrate that they never change—there’s something to be said about authenticity but you still want to grow. As someone who does street performance—I perform on the subway, in Union Square, Times Square, all the squares—I'd say that talking to strangers is a lost art. The whole idea is to stop someone in their day and to cheer them up. One, it’s a talent. Two, it’s a challenge. Three, it’s needed in life.”
koshadillz #talkingtostrangers malcolmgladwell / 📝📷 theubc #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity 🗽#repost from the archive because talking to strangers is everything 💞 2021-11-13 03:23:25 .. 738 -35% 8 -62%
This is the last stop on my book tour (for now) and I would love for you to join museummammy kareem emiliapetrarca and me tonight strandbookstore 7-8pm in the rare book room 💛 we will talk about creating culture and Between the Lines 💛 ticket link in bio 2021-11-10 21:18:57 This is the last st.. 322 -72% 0 -100%
BETWEEN THE LINES is officially out in the world today!!! Get your copy wherever books are sold and tell all your friends 💛 I’m majorly proud of this insanely beautiful co-creation that was made with love in New York City with 170 contributors during a pandemic and reflects 7 years of my work subwaybookreview 💥 Every major journey truly does start with one first step—or in my case, with one subway ride. Thank you, thank you, thank you to all who have trusted me and have shared their stories with me. Your “yes” is going to change the world. 
theubc #betweenthelinesbook #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity 📷 anrizzy 2021-11-09 22:40:38 BETWEEN .. 623 -45% 18 -14%
In this episode of the Between the Lines podcast you’re going to hear from writer, professor, and social commentator Roxane Gay roxanegay74 Because of the pandemic we couldn’t meet in person, but I was really curious to hear about Roxane’s favorite book(!) and so we decided to have a phone call instead. We talked about Edith Wharton, class, enjoying the good kind of tension, and experiencing the city through someone else’s eyes. Here’s Roxane.

Hosted by theubc Edited by alec_cohen Graphics by ella_ci If you love these stories, you can find more of them in my book Between the Lines (link in bio). 2021-11-08 22:29:08 In this e.. 100 -91% 8 -62%
NEW YORK — Troy: 2021-11-07 18:26:00 NEW YORK — Troy.. 1,431 +25% 15 -28%
“On the subway, we’re on our way, but haven’t arrived yet. It's a forward momentum like nowhere else in the city, but it's also a place where people have to stand still and you can really see them. The reason that I love talking to people underground is that it's a very special energy that's present. When I started SubwayBookReview in 2013 it was a different era. Representation was far from equitable and it was clear to me who I wanted to hand the mic to as my fellow New Yorker. What was required for the last decade is for individual voices to be heard. We're not winning at that yet, but we're doing a more decent job. What's required of us now is for these individual voices to come together and to form collectives so that we can figure out where we want to be going. 

My new book, BETWEEN THE LINES celebrates human connection, at a time when we’re hungry for it. During the pandemic we took great care of each other and we’ve got to continue. Check on your local businesses, your local artists --ask what they need. New York is such a proud town; we are hustlers and we want to make it on our own. I think it's easier if someone checks in with you, so be that person: ask and check in.

Fort Greene, where I live, embeds itself in your heart immediately and stays there forever. You can have a Cheers/Seinfeld moment and make new friends very easily. This neighborhood will reward you endlessly. The amount of times that Adam at black_iris_restaurant has given me a lentil soup to cheer me up are countless. Fort Greene is kind of like that small German village I grew up in. So I've kind of recreated a childhood situation here.

The New York stoop is its own town in a lot of ways. People don't utilize their stoop anymore because they have to sit inside and watch Netflix. The pandemic revived a lot of that dying culture of being together, outside.” theubc 

📝📷 : browstonebabe
repost from stoop.stories 2021-11-05 21:56:48 “On the.. 380 -67% 10 -52%
NEW YORK — Jumaane: “This book is a bit tattered, I’ve had it for a long time (laughs). Martin Luther King Jr. is one of my childhood heroes and he’s been pretty sanitized the way people speak about him. Toward the end of his life, and toward the end of Malcolm X's life, they were actually converging in thought, which is amazing. I think Americans are afraid of the word ‘radical’ when it’s about changing power structures. Otherwise people look back in history and have no problem with it. To me, being radical is necessary. Anything people enjoy about life came into existence through radical and revolutionary means. It amuses me that people pretend ‘being radical’ is something to fear, when in reality ‘being radical’ has singularly moved the world forward. Nelson Mandela was on the terrorist list for the United States of America in the 20th Century. I don’t think people realize that. I’m the Public Advocate of New York City and I was born and bred here. I'm forty-four and this is home. People tend to think of New York’s hard edge, and yes, we can be a little abrasive (laughs), but what people don't recognize unless they live here is that we have a lot of love. When a New Yorker is hurt, other New Yorkers come out and lift them up. Our love energy is strong. We all have to leave our city a little bit better than we found it. We owe it to the next generation to not to go backwards—and to keep that love energy strong.”
jumaane.williams #TheRadicalKing #MartinLutherKingJr #CornelWest brothercornelwest #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity #radical #love from the #archive 📝📷 theubc 2021-11-04 02:46:41 .. 282 -75% 1 -95%
I’m hosting the pub party of my dreams fotografiska.ny this Sunday and you’re cordially invited 💜 It’s a soirée with cocktails and magical (literally) performances by poetrybrothel 🔮 The only thing that can possibly make this better is seeing you there!! If you loved the 5-year anniversary party I threw for subwaybookreview you’re gonna go crazy for this special evening ✨ Get your tickets my loves & bring your friends!! Link in bio. Art by ella.ci 2021-11-02 21:36:16 I’m host.. 126 -89% 0 -100%
NEW YORK — Olivia: “Halloween is my favorite holiday. I wanted to read ‘The Shining’ in October to get in the mood. I like that there’s a deep history with the hotel, which is also the antagonist in the story. The main character, Jack, is being manipulated by the hotel. It’s a malevolent and an evil place. I’d say what makes a place evil is whatever inhabits it. There are energies that create a mood or a feeling. They accumulate the more congested a place is. New York has great energy. It’s my favorite place in the world.”
#stephenking #theshining #halloween #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity 👻 📷 theubc from the 2017 archive 2021-10-31 22:29:22 N.. 726 -36% 3 -86%
Tonight I’m going to talk about making the invisible visible with artist and blackgotham founder kamauware womxn’s health champion and poppyseedhealth founder simmone_taitt and design game changer and thekit founder danielvosovic ✨ This is a VIRTUAL EVENT powellsbooks to celebrate Between the Lines ✨ link in bio and at subwaybookreview.co/events 2021-10-28 22:45:36 Tonight I’m going.. 74 -94% 3 -86%
NEW YORK — Farha: “I'm going to see my mom and sometimes I bring her flowers. I don’t see her often because my parents live in New Jersey and I live in the Bronx. I love this city! There are so amazing people here from every culture and I'm constantly learning something new. My favorite stories are stories that make me cry [laughs]. This one is about a society where books are burned and you're not allowed to read anymore. I’m not going to spoil anything, because it’s so good, but I’ll say that this fictional society doesn’t want people to revolt and it focuses on everything except education, so that no one's asking questions anymore. What am I curious about? Right now, I’m learning about engineering. I had a robotics class and basically fell in love with programming and seeing robots come to life. It's the most amazing feeling ever. You have an idea, you make a blueprint, you program it, and then there’s a moment after all the hard work, where you turn on your robot, and it actually does what it needs to do. It's so satisfying! My dream robot would be one that helps the environment. I want to build something that cleans up Earth, or maybe a robot that filters water, or a robot that gets water from miles and miles away and brings it to people in need. That robot would also be really cool.”
#Fahrenheit451 #RayBradbury #subwaybookreview #newyorkcity 📝📷 theubc repost from the archives 2021-10-27 02:59:13 .. 943 -17% 5 -76%
It’s a book tour announcement!! Which by the way, it absolutely took a large-sized village to make my book tour happen because doing anything during a pandemic is crazy and chaotic and a wild trip. I’m deeply grateful for all who pitched in simonbooks to Monica Machado subwaybookreview and send major thanks to greenlightbklyn powellsbooks jjmlibrary fotografiska.ny strandbookstore for having me and to all the amazing panelists who are coming through to share their wisdom. Come to one, two, all events! You’d absolutely make my day. Link in bio and at www.subwaybookreview.co/events See you there 💖 2021-10-25 22:32:06 It’s a book tour.. 125 -89% 3 -86%

On average, Subway Book Review gets 1.1K likes and 21 comments per post. (Historical)

Post Stats Chart

Trends for likes, comments, and caption length from the last 30 posts.

Chart
Subway Book Review Instagram Profile Picture

Subway Book Review can charge up to $90 USD per Instagram post.

Typical range: $20 – $90 USD
Share earning estimate

Subway Book Review Profile Picture
Subway Book Review
Up to $90 USD / post · RateXYZ

Related Instagram Accounts

View all
Tracked since Oct 12, 2025
Updated: Oct 12, 2025
Time Zone: Asia/Kolkata

Not found? Add account

Find profiles fast. Paste a full URL or type a @username.

Tip Press / to focus search