
Molly Ringwald is launching her own book club, and it all started with one follower’s very honest comment about anxiety.
The actress, known for “Sixteen Candles” and “The Breakfast Club,” announced the new venture on Instagram. She wrote in her post: “This is for the person who said they got anxiety from seeing the book backwards! And it seems that a lot of you are up for a Molly book club, so count this as my first offering!”
The post drew more than 1,400 likes. That kind of early enthusiasm is a pretty good sign the community is already there, waiting.
So what kicked this off? A follower told Ringwald that seeing a book spine turned backwards gave them anxiety. It’s a small thing. Completely relatable. Ringwald didn’t scroll past it. She took that comment and turned it into something generous for everyone.
The first Molly Book Club pick is tied to the hashtag #anxietyland. Ringwald used that hashtag in her post alongside #mollybookclub and #anxiety. The exact book title wasn’t named in the announcement. But the theme is loud and clear: anxiety is front and center right from the start.
That’s a refreshing call for a book club debut. Most new book clubs open with something crowd-pleasing and safe. Ringwald is opening with a topic millions of people carry around quietly every day. It says something real about what kind of community she’s building.
There’s something genuinely warm about a book club announcement with no sponsor attached and no rollout strategy in sight. Ringwald clearly just decided. A follower said something honest. She felt something in response. And something good came of it.
It also fits who she is. Sam in “Sixteen Candles” and Claire in “The Breakfast Club” were both characters trying to find their footing. The world didn’t always make room for them. Audiences connected with those characters. They felt real and a little bit vulnerable. A book club built around anxiety feels like the same energy, just a few decades on.
The demand for this was already there. Her post hints the book club idea had come up in comments before. Ringwald wasn’t creating buzz from scratch. She was responding to something real.
The response was immediate. Comments reflected real excitement and genuine personal connection. No algorithm can manufacture that kind of response.
Celebrity book clubs have become a genuine cultural force. Reese Witherspoon’s book club has helped launch dozens of authors onto bestseller lists. Emma Roberts runs Belletrist with a devoted following. And Oprah Winfrey’s book club has shaped reading habits for nearly three decades. Ringwald is stepping into that company now.
But the origin story here is different from the usual celebrity announcement. There was no press release. No brand deal. No polished rollout campaign. Just a follower being honest about a backwards book spine, and Ringwald answering with warmth and a brand-new club.
She could have just flipped the book over. Instead, she built something for everyone carrying that quiet, low-grade anxious feeling. That’s a genuinely sweet reason to start something new.
Molly Book Club is in its very early days. There’s no schedule announced, no co-hosts named, and no platform confirmed yet. The launch is personal and warm. That tone is already making it stand out.
More than 1,400 people liked the idea. Not a single detail was even worked out yet. That’s a strong start for a book club born from a single backwards spine.
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