tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post4868601883746759453..comments2024-03-18T09:09:59.625-04:00Comments on Janet Reid, Literary Agent: So, I got an ARC with a review request...but I don't like the bookJanet Reidhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00615380335938685231noreply@blogger.comBlogger38125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-58482373257226842492018-02-07T18:03:03.784-05:002018-02-07T18:03:03.784-05:00It may sound weird but it depends greatly for me w...It may sound weird but it depends greatly for me who I'm working with. If it a book I've obtained through NetGalley or Blogging for Books, I'll be honest no matter what my review is (obviously professional and polite, no matter what my opinion is, but honest). And if I'm working with the author or publisher directly, I tend to tell them the book wasn't right for me and I can't follow up with a review. That happened to me recently and they understood. Nicole Pyleshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06920135146911951755noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-11451129182481118632018-02-02T02:01:20.993-05:002018-02-02T02:01:20.993-05:00Fascinating and insightful. Love you guys! I was r...Fascinating and insightful. Love you guys! I was recently asked to read a book for an honest review and politely declined. Like others here I was worried what to do if I didn't like it (I don't post negative reviews, even though I appreciate reading them when purchasing books).AJ Blythehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04529233142099749005noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-50068067328147792402018-02-01T18:12:40.979-05:002018-02-01T18:12:40.979-05:00I have, several times, considered throwing my name...I have, several times, considered throwing my name into Good Reads hat. All of those free books. Then I remember all the other things I have heard about them and cut it off.<br /><br />I do read some of their reviews. Usually I wish there were more on the mechanics of the read. Is it a good story but a hard read, does it come together after page fifty and so on.<br /><br />I have gotten a couple of ARCs from critique and beta partners. It amazes me how degraded some of them are. The originals didn't have as many mistakes as their ARCs did.I know that there are almost no perfect books. Missed commas and such happen but not to the extent ARCs usually have.<br /><br /><b>Steve</b>: Thanks, astute insights.Craig Fhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07157301156577795781noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-4606438068860541992018-02-01T18:08:55.371-05:002018-02-01T18:08:55.371-05:00I love this side topic that we've wandered int...I love this side topic that we've wandered into, about the usefulness of negative reviews. I love the fine art of reading reviews and determining from them if I want to read a book or not. I often pass by well-reviewed books because I can tell from what the few dissenters are saying that it is not for me. :)Gypmarhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10023108950501721303noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-40335383482946571132018-02-01T18:03:39.262-05:002018-02-01T18:03:39.262-05:00Like K.White and Sarah, I don't review books. ...Like K.White and Sarah, I don't review books. As an aspiring author, I only want to create good vibes with my fellow journey-men and women. ! do make exceptions for friends though - but only if I can be honestly positive.<br /><br />In OP's case, I'd be inclined to send her critique to the publisher and not post a review.MA Hudsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11055543285024785889noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-34306450522015581292018-02-01T15:42:54.606-05:002018-02-01T15:42:54.606-05:00It may also merit noting that there was a study do...It may also merit noting that there was a study done a few years ago that concluded that even negative reviews drive sales. They help people know if a product is or isn't for them/does or doesn't fit their specific wants/needs. And they actually reduce merchandise returns. <br /><br />My background is in marketing and this was a study we talked about with clients quite a bit when it first came out. I haven't seen any follow up studies, but I'm guessing it's still true. Leaving a review with a detailed take on why a book didn't resonate with you isn't a bad thing. It helps book buyers - and, if the study is to be believed, it actually helps the author too.Gigihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09199129765216390246noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-82653018511970187742018-02-01T14:14:18.379-05:002018-02-01T14:14:18.379-05:00What Cheryl said. "Not for me" is still ...What Cheryl said. "Not for me" is still the truth...and it saves you from gritting your teeth, and making yourself uncomfortable only to ensure that others aren't. You do not have to shrink yourself to make them feel bigger. Haven't we done that enough in life? I certainly have. <br /><br />I used to review books for <b>Library Journal</b> (contractual obligation). There were some books I majorly disliked, but with a publication, it was necessary to keep objective. I still gave criticisms, but in a way that was focused on helping a librarian choose whether to select the book or not--which kept me from unleashing full vitriol. I reviewed <b>Wild</b> by Cheryl Strayed, and while I wasn't a fan, plenty of other people were. Everything is subjective.<br /><br />Sidenote: I spoke with a published author recently who said that her book was at least three drafts revised from the ARC version--so a lot of criticisms a book gets on that level may be resolved by the time publication rolls around. Just a thought. (Maybe I should re-read <b>Wild</b>?)<br /><br />I now read and review books on my blog that I <b>want</b> to read, and it has made all the difference. There was a point where I dreaded reading--now I love it again. Don't burn yourself out doing what you don't want.Karen McCoyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02640324898284007337noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-1286776775587571942018-02-01T13:58:11.508-05:002018-02-01T13:58:11.508-05:00I was just asked to write a blurb (my first one! W... I was just asked to write a blurb (my first one! Whoo hoo!) and I admit to feeling fear as I opened the document. Luckily, it's good. But now I am wondering about the writers whom I sent my ARC to for blurbs who never responded. I think as a writer I would have liked to hear something, even if they felt they could not write a blurb. Even...I don't have time, or I couldn't connect with it enough to write a blurb...SOMETHING. As I tell my teams, "Silence means compliance."Maryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11166776565191771729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-74681210843997474682018-02-01T12:32:59.840-05:002018-02-01T12:32:59.840-05:00I haven't wanted (or been offered) any ARCs, b...I haven't wanted (or been offered) any ARCs, but I've wondered this, too. No review seems kinder than a 1 or 2, and I'd hate to make an enemy of the wrong person in this age of internet mobs. Especially when I hope to be published, myself some day.<br /><br />I love @Cheryl's key phrase! Thanks.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-22695260438988114362018-02-01T11:36:55.233-05:002018-02-01T11:36:55.233-05:00What an insightful post and thread (as always!).
...What an insightful post and thread (as always!).<br /><br />I think we're dealing with two issues: are we obligated to finish and review an ARC (no!), and should we post honest reviews?<br /><br />I love honest reviews from bloggers and reviewers. I think Susan of <a href="http://www.yahoo.com" rel="nofollow">Bloggin' 'Bout Books</a> does a fabulous job of giving honest, insightful reviews that don't feel like performance art– posts that draws attention to the reviewer's brilliance/snarkiness at the author's expense.<br /><br />But I'm with <b>K White</b>. As an author, I choose not to write negative reviews. Critiques of already published books don't help the author. She couldn't revise based on my feedback, even if she wanted to. And I'd hate to meet an author of a book I panned, which is possible. The writing community is really small. We deal with enough barriers to our writing. I'd rather not add to someone else's burden.Sarahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06909176210194176373noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-9952818932832984782018-02-01T11:34:30.732-05:002018-02-01T11:34:30.732-05:00If you do decide to write an honest, DNF review, c...If you do decide to write an honest, DNF review, consider the phrase "It's not for me." As in, "There's a lot of repetitive internal dialogue, which I know some readers enjoy but it's not for me."<br /><br />Acknowledging that things you don't like might be things others do like can go a long way towards making a negative review tolerable.<br /><br />And to be honest, I've found negative reviews helpful, not just in finding books to avoid, but in finding books to read. Because we don't all like or hate the same tropes and writing tics.Cherylhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09128656624170294636noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-43082188350286146442018-02-01T11:24:43.942-05:002018-02-01T11:24:43.942-05:00I just finished The Hate U Give! I had high expect...I just finished The Hate U Give! I had high expectations (Angie Thomas has a fantastic query for a different book on query shark, btw), and it completely exceeded them. <br /><br />I think the review question is different if you are working towards become a published novelist, or a professional reviewer. If you hope to keep reviewing and eventually get paid for it, by all means, write an intelligent and thoughtful low-rating critique. If you are working towards publishing your own fiction, then I think the other posters have good thoughts about how to make that decision. RachelErinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09510327163701754950noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-19895346886791279082018-02-01T11:13:39.533-05:002018-02-01T11:13:39.533-05:00I wanted to come back and say, since I can't e...I wanted to come back and say, since I can't edit my first post, OP, if you can't finish the book, don't. But if you choose to leave an honest review about the book, tell people you couldn't finish it and why. Don't finish it for the sake of reading to the end. That's time in your life you'll never get back.nightsmusichttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05984119792540771870noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-72709653790797930822018-02-01T11:11:21.557-05:002018-02-01T11:11:21.557-05:00I keep reading that publishing is a small communit...I keep reading that publishing is a small community, meaning everybody knows everybody else. My instinct is, if you get crosswise with Random House, everybody will know YOU. And not in a good way.<br /><br />Your forthcoming autobiography about how boring it was growing up at the bottom of a swimming pool trying to survive eating jelly beans may not get published by Random House.<br /><br />Or by Anyotherhouse either.<br /><br />Payback's a bitch.<br /><br />I don't know why everybody is writing an autobiography but they do.<br /><br />Really, who cares if someone grew up in somebody else's outhouse and developed sleep apnia because it smelled so bad?<br /><br />And why do publishers print this crap when there are so many good unpublished MSS out there about how it rained last night or some other exciting thing like that?<br /><br />They must be starving for good material.<br /><br />Maybe I should take up writing.<br />Steve Stubbshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13421775912951050610noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-56439646779570536302018-02-01T11:00:17.798-05:002018-02-01T11:00:17.798-05:00If you think that finishing the book and writing a...If you think that finishing the book and writing an honest review will help you in your own writing journey (I learn a lot from poorly written books and articulating why I found them poorly written), you should go ahead an do so. If your time would really be better spent doing something else, pass the book on to someone you know who might like it better than you--whether or not they might bother to review it. Elissa Mhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10727748060605823895noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-54272890962696916362018-02-01T10:55:22.460-05:002018-02-01T10:55:22.460-05:00OP, I like Theresa's idea of a review without ...OP, I like Theresa's idea of a review without a rating. I was in a similar situation. I won a non-fiction book that seemed to be about a subject I was interested in, but turned out to be more of an insider's gossip book, with a lot of name-dropping. I wrote something about it being well-written (which it was) and would be interesting for someone interested in the inner workings of the industry, but was a little disappointing for me. <br /><br />Also remember, on Goodreads 3 stars means "I liked it." Beth Carpenterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02447148196867821907noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-90637560803861639072018-02-01T10:36:05.047-05:002018-02-01T10:36:05.047-05:00Kathy Joyce, I have a lot of stories in on-line jo...<b>Kathy Joyce</b>, I have a lot of stories in on-line journals. I’d want to know if one of mine had a mistake. And I’d appreciate your sensitivity about doing it privately.<br /><br />Book reviews are a really big deal to authors. I won’t waste my time reading a book I don’t like. And I might write directly to an author about an ARC that had a lot of mistakes, but I haven’t posted a negative review. I’m in that generation where I heard: If you don’t have anything nice to say about someone, keep your mouth shut. I know that for most authors, especially newer ones, the work is so much a part of them that I hesitate to say anything bad. So I say nothing.Sherry Howardhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04326605891373049617noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-82351552806860155952018-02-01T10:05:20.514-05:002018-02-01T10:05:20.514-05:00Weird juxtaposition after Colin's post. Colin,...Weird juxtaposition after Colin's post. Colin, not talking about you "in disguise." Looking forward to reading your story.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01999175415765818941noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-37828546718694305122018-02-01T10:00:19.623-05:002018-02-01T10:00:19.623-05:00OT, kind of. So I just read a short story publishe...OT, kind of. So I just read a short story published online. The author posted on twitter how pleased she was that her story was selected for an online journal, and gave the link. The story has a grammatical error, ("had went") that stopped me cold. Others will notice. <br /><br />I don't know this author, but I do like her work. The story is published, (and I assume it went through an editor). But, since it's published online, it could be fixed. Do I say something? (I wouldn't do it publicly, on twitter or her blog, so would have to search for an email address.)Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01999175415765818941noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-29560751411713160432018-02-01T09:49:34.932-05:002018-02-01T09:49:34.932-05:00Opie: I never post a rating or a review of a book ...<b>Opie</b>: <i>I never post a rating or a review of a book unless I can give it 4 or 5 stars.</i> So don't. Just because a big publisher sends you a book and asks for a review doesn't mean you sacrifice your integrity. If those are your review rules, stick to them. And if anyone cries foul, just point to your rule. It's your account, and, as Janet said, you're under no contractual obligation to give a review.<br /><br />As for good reading, you might want to check out this month's issue of <a href="https://riggwelterpress.WordPress.com/" rel="nofollow">Riggwelter Magazine</a>. Not that I'm self-promoting or anything... but the story's called "A Brief Affair." 😆Colin Smithhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03292997431935215499noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-83000874897358515652018-02-01T09:47:51.160-05:002018-02-01T09:47:51.160-05:00This is exactly why I stopped writing book reviews...This is exactly why I stopped writing book reviews. Personally knowing how difficult it is to write a novel, I hated the possibility that my opinion might negatively affect the author in some way. <br /><br />And even when I like a book, I have trouble reviewing it, because I think too much like a writer and not like a reader, so I'm not confident the majority of the audience would get value from my opinions. <br /><br />I used to follow the 50-page rule, but found that I stopped reading like 80-percent of the books that I had bought. So my 2018 resolution was to stop buying so many books. Now, I get them at the library, and if I keep reading past page 50, then I buy the book.K. Whitehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15018562571421785494noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-71314541332353443632018-02-01T09:45:26.418-05:002018-02-01T09:45:26.418-05:00I don't review books either. I do however, rea...I don't review books either. I do however, read all of the 2 and one star reviews. One can learn a lot reading them such as, badly written, too many asides, too many thoughts that should have been put into some form of conversation, poor research, no real plot, etc, etc. Life is too short for me to waste my time and money on a book I won't read more than a quarter of the way through.<br /><br />That said, I encourage you, OP, to post your review. You can be kind but honest regarding the flaws in the book. Since it's an ARC, I have no idea if the publisher looks at all reviews and takes into consideration what the lower reviews have to say, but you're doing them and the author a favor by being honest. If they have time to pull the book for an edit, so be it. If not, the book stands with all of its flaws, but you took the time to let others know what they are and there are many readers like me who appreciate that.nightsmusichttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05984119792540771870noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-84160913278028323232018-02-01T09:41:22.299-05:002018-02-01T09:41:22.299-05:00I understand not wanting to "be mean" on...I understand not wanting to "be mean" online, but I value honesty more than attempting not to hurt some unknown author's feelings. I use Goodreads reviews to decide what I want to read next. If a book has only glowing reviews because the people who didn't like it just skipped over it, that would be totally misleading. And I get very annoyed when I realize I've purchased and am spending my precious time reading a bad book. There are too many good ones out there I still want to get to!<br /><br />Basically, I don't like the idea that instead of writing a negative review, people would just skip over the book. Tell me why you didn't like it! Please!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-51986288133684008952018-02-01T09:39:01.313-05:002018-02-01T09:39:01.313-05:00Honestly, I truly wish more people would write hon...Honestly, I truly wish more people would write honest reviews. I feel like so many people on GoodReads just write good ones because they want to gain a following and win free books. Books always seem to have between 3.7 and 4.5 stars, almost never more or less. And the last several times I bought something based on positive GR reviews, I've been disappointed. <br /><br />OP, you're not just ranting over small things--you have valid points! I'd encourage you to share those points and save the rest of us $15 on a bad book when we could be spending it on a good one. The Noise In Spacehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13433798159445551782noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-29740938979137365972018-02-01T09:27:34.269-05:002018-02-01T09:27:34.269-05:00Opie: about Janet's suggestion to read somethi...Opie: about Janet's suggestion to read something you do like. A few of my favorites:<br /><br />Word by Word: The Secret life of Dictionaries by Kory Stamper recommended by Janet. A fascinating read and the author's sly humor shows up unexpectedly. <br /><br />On Turpentine Lane by Elinor Lipman. Romantic comedy with suspense about her attic find in her new home.<br /><br />The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill, also recommended by a Reider, I believe.<br /><br />Mr. Loverman by Bernardine Evaristo. A GLBT story about a West Indian not-quite-happily-married couple living in Britain.<br /><br />I need to read Kathy Joyce's recommendation, The Hate U Give. I just read Nathan Bradford's interview with author Angie Thomas. Lisa Bodenheimhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17809067722921953857noreply@blogger.com