Sarah J. Mass Takes Over Spotify’s Most Streamed List of Last 20 Years With Multiple Audio Books in the List
The first time you read Sarah J. Maas, you are swept into a fever dream of fae courts, winged lovers, and betrayals. It is love at first read. The second time, however, the spell flickers. You begin to hear the machinery, the cadence of repetition, the swelling melodrama, the insistence on emotional altitude even when the moment barely earns it. Maas’ prose thrives on grand declarations, sentences that arrive dressed for a coronation when a conversation would suffice.
Yet popularity rarely hinges on restraint. If anything, Maas’ maximalism has found its perfect second life in audio. Her audiobooks are turning overwrought dialogue into something closer to operatic indulgence. It is no surprise, then, that listeners keep pressing play.
A streaming milestone for Sarah J. Maas that reads like a fantasy conquest
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In a landmark achievement, Sarah J. Maas has effectively colonized Spotify’s audiobook charts. Four entries from her A Court of Thorns and Roses saga have secured positions within the platform’s top 20 most-streamed audiobooks of all time. Sitting at number one is A Court of Thorns and Roses, followed by A Court of Mist and Fury at fifth, A Court of Wings and Ruin at seventh, and A Court of Silver Flames at sixteenth.
Two decades since Spotify first altered how the world consumes sound, the platform marked its anniversary by unveiling its most-streamed artists, songs, albums, podcasts, and audiobooks. Predictably, the music categories are populated by streaming-era titans, Taylor Swift, Bad Bunny, Drake, The Weeknd, and Ed Sheeran alongside stalwarts like Rihanna, Eminem, and Coldplay. But it is within audiobooks that the real narrative twist unfolds, where Maas reigns with the kind of authority usually reserved for chart-topping pop royalty.
And speaking of royalty, among the many lists Spotify released, the most-streamed artists category carries its own intrigue, a mix of cultural dominance and controversy that reads like a tabloid symphony.
Kanye West enters the streaming pantheon, controversy in tow
Kanye West lands at number ten on Spotify’s most-streamed artists list, while Taylor Swift predictably claims the crown at number one. The juxtaposition feels almost scripted: Swift, the architect of precision pop narratives, versus West, the perennial disruptor whose artistry is inseparable from his volatility. West’s current chapter is as tumultuous as ever.
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His latest album 'Bully' arrives amid a swirl of cancellations and political scrutiny, even as his Los Angeles concert reportedly grossed an eye-watering $33 million. Scheduled to headline the Hellwatt Festival in Reggio Emilia on July 18, his European tour remains precarious. Political figures, including European Parliament vice president Pina Picierno, have openly challenged the decision to proceed, while local officials distance themselves from his rhetoric.
In the end, Spotify’s anniversary lists read like a cultural ledger of excess: maximalist fantasy in Sarah J. Maas’ audiobooks, maximalist persona in West’s career. Different mediums, same principle, volume, in every sense, wins.
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What do you make of this collision between literature, audio performance, and streaming-era dominance? Share your thoughts.
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Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra
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