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AI Visibility · young adult novels

Does AI recommend the best young adult novels?

More readers now ask an AI assistant — ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Gemini, or Amazon’s Rufus — “what are the best young adult novels?” instead of browsing. The AI names a short shortlist of titles. If your book isn’t on it, the reader never discovers it.

Find out where your book stands in young adult novels

Surfio asks five AI engines (incl. Amazon Rufus) the questions readers actually ask, and scores whether your book is recommended for young adult novels — and which titles get named instead. Free, ~90 seconds.

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Why AI visibility matters for young adult novels

When a reader asks for young adult novels like “The Hunger Games”, the assistant synthesises an answer from Goodreads, reviews, Reddit threads, “best of” listicles and structured data — not from your ad spend. Books that are well-cited across those sources get recommended; books that aren’t, don’t. Surfio shows you which of the five engines surface your book, at what list-position, and the precise blurb, metadata and structured-data changes to fix it.

Where AI gets its young adult novels recommendations

The sources the five AI engines cite most when recommending young adult novels, from 12 live Surfio audits. These are the pages to get your book onto — get cited here and AI is far more likely to recommend you.

01en.wikipedia.orgAuthoritycited 153×
02goodreads.comAuthoritycited 112×
03ala.orgGet featuredcited 85×
04barnesandnoble.comAuthoritycited 72×
05thenovelry.comGet featuredcited 48×
06youtube.comGet talked aboutcited 46×
07bookfair.orgGet featuredcited 41×
08theweek.comGet featuredcited 31×
09betterworldbooks.comGet featuredcited 28×
10yalsa.ala.orgGet featuredcited 24×
11fictionate.meGet featuredcited 23×
12school.teachingbooks.netGet featuredcited 23×

Your full report shows which of these already mention you, and which to pitch first.

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