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William wrote: "Interesting thoughts, Sharon. Reviews can be tricky. What do you do when a colleague asks you to review their latest book, and you don't like it? Would you write a bad review or would you simply..."I always tell people who ask me to review their book that I am going to be honest about what I like and don't like. I have been very pleasantly surprised on numerous occasions (and not so pleasantly surprised a few times as well, I must admit) by the books I've been asked to review.
That said, because all books start out at 5 stars with me (as discussed in the methodology post), I find that most reviewers are happy with the outcome.
I was asked to read a romance novel a couple of years ago -- by an author who knew I was a walk-away from the genre. I spent a lot of time with a three-star review in my head based on what I was reading -- until her characters did something that astonished and moved me so much that I added a star back on. She was thrilled to receive a four-star review from an admitted walk-away from her preferred genre.
I had one author tell me that he wanted an honest review -- and then was furious when he got one (three stars, because his idea had a lot of potential, but he had major editing problems that I could not overlook).
I have only *once* given a 1-star review to a book I was asked to review (I have never given out 2 stars in a similar situation), to a book that had people doing completely implausible things and used some unfortunate expository devices. The majority of my reviews are 3 to 5 stars in any case (my average is 4.36).
As authors, we naturally hope that everyone will love our books, while understanding that some people will flat-out hate them. The majority of people are going to fall somewhere in between. Looking at reviews for bestsellers shows that reviews are *always* mixed.
I know that was a lengthy answer to your question, but I appreciate the opportunity to elucidate.
Edited to add: There has been a great deal of discussion in the indie book community about people who will post positive/5-star book reviews for a fee. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-la... talks about this at length.
I can't speak for any other author, but I would rather have an honest review that I didn't care for than a glowing one that I bought.
No, that's a great answer. I like your approach. I guess because all writers are readers first, we start off looking forward to the book, and can nearly always find something interesting, a word choice, a new kind of character. But yes, the editing has to be in order or I start to feel cheated!William Doonan




William Doonan
www.williamdoonan.com