The good, the bad and the ugly about book reviews.

Hi all!

I’m sure everyone knows the saying - ‘If you have nothing good to say then don’t say anything at all.’ (And all of its variations.) I think this should apply in some measure to book reviews.

I read a debut novel two years ago from an unknown author. I wrote to tell the author on her Facebook page how much I had enjoyed her book. She responded graciously, with enthusiasm and excitement… she was published and recognised! Then some weeks ago I came across reviews of the same novel on a well-received site and was surprised to see the huge variance of her ratings.

Her novel had been published by a large publishing house. It had beautiful layout, an amazing cover and perfect editing. I thought the story was enchanting and fascinating, but not everyone thought so. She scored a host of ratings around one out of five, not much in the middle, and then seemed to soar to four and five out of five. I noticed that she had taken down her Facebook page since. There were well over a hundred reviews, so unless she was extremely social, her high-end scores could not all have been given by friends! Imagine being a first time writer and creating this kind of conflict of opinion amongst the reading public? Imagine how tough it would be to take, after your hard work, acceptance by a publisher, the excitement of recognition and then, the ensuing confusion.

If the author is already hugely successful, has published thirty books and then written a bad one, then it’s hardly likely that it will hurt them to receive bad reviews for one or two novels. However, in writing a review for a debut novel, there might be a couple of things to take into consideration. The writer has just begun a journey, (and no, not everyone is meant to write books,) but destroying someone is also not the answer to helping their writing future.

And one more word on reviews: A good review is not supposed to be a spoiler, and there are some reviewers that appear to be confused about this; I would imagine it might be a fast track to losing them credibility. Also the length of a review needs to stay within the realm of sanity. When a reviewer dissects a novel to shreds and turns their review into a short story, I switch off, walk away and lose interest in the review altogether. I think a good review lets us know just enough of ‘why, how and where’ and then lets us get on with the job of reading the book for ourselves, if we choose.

I’d love to hear any opinions… because this topic affects us all.
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Published on March 28, 2013 15:54 Tags: debut-novels, positive-feedback, ratings-and-scores, reviews
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message 1: by Kayle (new)

Kayle Hey there,

Love your books, I'm not a writer just a reader so I gotta agree on the long review part... once a review goes past five lines I opt out and close the page... boring. I like to figure stuff out for myself, not be told how to think, feel and read something. Thanks for another great post.
K


message 2: by Kayly (new)

Kayly Hi Deby,
First let me say thank you for some of your insightful blogs and ideas.
I've started writing my first short novel and I will admit that after seeing how some books I like have been reviewed I think this must be quite daunting. I can see myself sitting with bated breath, chewing my nails... how do you cope with with a much-awaited review... do you get jitters, (I've noticed you get high reviews, so are you quite confident?) I'm always curious about how different people's coping mechanisms work for them.
Love your books, by the way.
Lynnie


message 3: by Deby (last edited Mar 28, 2013 11:50PM) (new)

Deby Adair Hi K,

Thanks for your comment, it's always great to hear from one of my readers.
And it's interesting to know how others feel about an idea. I was wondering if I was the only impatient one. :)

Best wishes,
Deby


message 4: by Deby (new)

Deby Adair Hi Kayly Lynn,

It's nice to hear from you. Please don't let your future reviews put you off! This is something you won't have to worry about for some time since you've only started writing your first book, and certainly not something that should tailor what you're writing. The thing that matters is to write with precision and self honesty. Enjoy the journey and reviews will take care of themselves.

Best wishes,
Deby
(PS- I'm thrilled that you love my books.)


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