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Definitely. It makes me more and more uncomfortable to rate books. There is a mixture of implications in the ratings imo, partly that I judge its literary merits, that I compare one book against another while trying to express my personal feelings towards it as well. Which might be true but also raises the question how successful am I in bringing this different aspects into a rating, or not only into one rating but in all of them. Which rating is more truthful? I honestly cannot say.
Hence I am doubtful about it as a whole, especially since ratings as such most likely dont mean the same thing for two different persons. A book with a low rating or very few reviews might easily be one I enjoy very much, and the reason for being overlooked might be that GoodReads is not the right place for the book since the main interest of their users is be a different one, for eg leaning towards YA/Paranormal while the book in question is "experimental". (a term I am not really fond of and I am using against my better judgement).
Plus the boosting about a "perfect" rating by authors touches also several other questions about marketing or that there are basically no boundaries anymore between authors and non-authors. There is at times the implication that disliking a book, expressed with a low rating, is a personal attack, while on the other site a high rating is used as a marketing tool. This is probably inevitable since the fences are down in every respect but my rating should not be used (or should I call it mis-used?) in any way when I "only" want to express myself. Hardly (or never?) I have had an interesting discussion about a book which was caused by a rating, but by a review or a comment.
I am all for the purist stance of yours but again, I do understand that for most authors it wont work that way and they are trying everything to market their product in any way possible. I may not like this part of the story but I guess I have to accept it.
Hence I am doubtful about it as a whole, especially since ratings as such most likely dont mean the same thing for two different persons. A book with a low rating or very few reviews might easily be one I enjoy very much, and the reason for being overlooked might be that GoodReads is not the right place for the book since the main interest of their users is be a different one, for eg leaning towards YA/Paranormal while the book in question is "experimental". (a term I am not really fond of and I am using against my better judgement).
Plus the boosting about a "perfect" rating by authors touches also several other questions about marketing or that there are basically no boundaries anymore between authors and non-authors. There is at times the implication that disliking a book, expressed with a low rating, is a personal attack, while on the other site a high rating is used as a marketing tool. This is probably inevitable since the fences are down in every respect but my rating should not be used (or should I call it mis-used?) in any way when I "only" want to express myself. Hardly (or never?) I have had an interesting discussion about a book which was caused by a rating, but by a review or a comment.
I am all for the purist stance of yours but again, I do understand that for most authors it wont work that way and they are trying everything to market their product in any way possible. I may not like this part of the story but I guess I have to accept it.
Even your example of Ulysses I had in mind. Did I enjoy it? Not really, it was one of the worst reading experiences I had in my life and gave up after approximately 500 pages, but it doesnt mean I dont acknowledge it merits, or how it changed literature on a larger scale. Would a 1* star rating here be justified? Definitely, since this was my personal experience, but for the reasons mentioned before I hesitate to do so - and actually never rated it.
And since we are dealing with words, words should be the only thing that matters.