3. People review books because, generally, they love reading books and then discussing them with other people who also love reading books. Not because they're part of a secret global plot to discredit you. (You're not that important.)4. Stop whinging and go and write something.
I should print that and put it on my study wall, LOL!
I've had good reviews, I've had bad reviews, I've had middling reviews, and that's life, isn't it? Not everyone is going to like the same things.
I review books too for the main reason above, I love talking about books I've loved or hated (and since I don't get paid for those reviews, it's an unprofessional review, isn't it?) I sometimes get the books free from the author in order to review them, but I review a lot of my own books that I've paid for too.
Lisa: your post is so excellent I felt my pupils dilate. I wanna review u so hard right now.#3: Emma, I swear, she knows it and is havin us on. Puppy play in the Good Boy? When she says she "doesn't notice"—HER WORDS ARE LIES.
#20 + #26: Katyna, your comments gave me many good lulz, for they are true and full of lulz.
#35: Chris, someone needs to kiss your Hessians for that apt Beau Brummell reference. I would do it myself if I weren't already at Gretna Green with Lisa's post.
genao wrote: "Lisa: your post is so excellent I felt my pupils dilate. I wanna review u so hard right now.#3: Emma, I swear, she knows it and is havin us on. Puppy play in the Good Boy? When she says she "doe..."
#56 genao, oooh, Hessians.....pass me my vinaigrette. I am sure you could blight someone's season, er, novel, if only you were a professional reviewer.
snowpeach wrote: "AT LAST... an author who gets it!kudos to you"
I promise, there are lots of us out there who get it. We just don't usually make as much noise as those who don't. :)
Annette wrote: "3. People review books because, generally, they love reading books and then discussing them with other people who also love reading books. Not because they're part of a secret global plot to discre..."Exactly! You've paid for a book, you've got as much right as anyone to review it. And yeah, we all get a mixed bag of reviews. That's what wine is for. :)
genao wrote: "Lisa: your post is so excellent I felt my pupils dilate. I wanna review u so hard right now.#3: Emma, I swear, she knows it and is havin us on. Puppy play in the Good Boy? When she says she "doe..."
You can review me any day. Grrr. (That was a sexy growl BTW, and not at all because I'm thinking about puppy play. Not. At. All...)
And I should add, just because you and my post have rushed off to Gretna Green doesn't mean you can't spend quality time with Chris's Beau Brummell reference. My post is totally open with that sort of arrangement.
Great post! Professional reviews bore me, and sometimes I think people who professionally review fiction only like deep, experimental fiction that isn't much fun for me to read. I like unprofessional reviews for the reason you listed. Sometimes negative reviews are even more helpful to me because sometimes what other people don't like is something I do.
Con wrote: "A critical reviewer here on Goodreads became my beta. I'd take critical reviews any day of the week if it meant meeting people who could help me. Who wouldn't want that? Besides, now I have someo..."
Who wouldn't want it? Seems there are a few people I've seen on here who seem to think themselves above reproach, and only accept fawning adoration, and praise as authentic, and seem to make it their mission to go after those that disagree.
Even if criticism stings we all need it if we want to improve with whatever it is we do if we really care about doing better, that is.
Truer words have not been told.I certainly rely 100% on unprofessional reviewers when I choose a book because let's face it, professionals are getting paid to do it and even if you have faith in their impartiality, I still believe that when you get paid to do sth it sucks some of the joy out of it. In "proper-scholarly" reviews, with the perfect structure and spelling and grammar, you can read the words but you can't actually feel the excitement or the dissapointment of the reviewer.
I think authors should feel glad readers decided to give them a small piece of their time, that should make them feel important, not the 5 stars(this should just make them proud).
And I should add that many times I've decided to read a book based on a bad review. Humans are curious creatures, we want to know what others do. If an author could "delete" all the bad reviews about their books I believe they would lose more readers than they would have thought.
Well you know, taste is subjective. There is actually someone in this world who absolutely loves the movie Baby Geniuses. There are now 5 Baby Geniuses movies. Someone loves that stuff. And there is someone else who thinks that song about leaving the cake in the rain is the best song ever written and sung.
I bet it wouldn't be hard to find a list from 100 different non-professional reviewers that have both Baby Geniuses and the cake in the rain song on their lists of worst things ever. But they keep making movies about talking babies and that song has been covered dozens of times.
Obviously you can't let a review bother you and you gotta keep listening to the people that want what you deliver.
Christina wrote: "(adds author to "to read" and "author is badass" list)"Thanks Christina!
And thanks to everyone who liked this post as well. :)
MLE wrote: "Great post! Professional reviews bore me, and sometimes I think people who professionally review fiction only like deep, experimental fiction that isn't much fun for me to read. I like unprofession..."Exactly! I've read heaps of stuff that other people have hated, and loved the crazy ride. And so, so true about "experimental fiction that isn't fun to read". Sometimes I just want a good story.
Con wrote: "A critical reviewer here on Goodreads became my beta. I'd take critical reviews any day of the week if it meant meeting people who could help me. Who wouldn't want that? Besides, now I have someo..."
What a great idea!
Joanna wrote: "Truer words have not been told.I certainly rely 100% on unprofessional reviewers when I choose a book because let's face it, professionals are getting paid to do it and even if you have faith in ..."
I"m with you, Joanna. I'd rather know about someone's emotional response to a book. That's what gets me curious about reading a book.
Katyna wrote: "Well you know, taste is subjective. There is actually someone in this world who absolutely loves the movie Baby Geniuses. There are now 5 Baby Geniuses movies. Someone loves that stuff. And t..."
Wait...are you saying that the Baby Genius movies and the song about the cake int he rain aren't the best things ever created in the history of the world? ;)
But you're so right. Even if someone hates your book, someone else will love it. And, when the bad reviews sting, remember you're writing for the people who love what you do.
MLE wrote: "Con wrote: "A critical reviewer here on Goodreads became my beta. I'd take critical reviews any day of the week if it meant meeting people who could help me. Who wouldn't want that? Besides, now ..."
There are definitely too many authors out there who, when they get a bad review, would rather go after the reviewer than either shrug the whole thing off, or, god forbid, actually admit the reviewer might have a point!
Deborah wrote: "This right here? Awesome."Ditto (and "like" ^_^).
(Btw, Lisa, the timing of this post is also pretty awesome.)
ETA: soon wrote: "(Btw, Lisa, the timing of this post is also pretty awesome.)"
The sad thing is, I think a post like this is always timely, because some idiot author is usually on a campaign against reviewers.
This is awesome!!! Thank you so much for discussing this issue in a witty way! I have bookmarked it just so it can be used as a reference, GREAT blog post! :)
Ali wrote: "This is awesome!!! Thank you so much for discussing this issue in a witty way! I have bookmarked it just so it can be used as a reference, GREAT blog post! :)"Glad you liked it, Ali!
I LOVE THIS POST! A-freakin-Men!!! Amazing post that is so true! You can't like them all but you can't bitch when someone DOESN'T like your work. That's life....move the crap on! Geez!
Annie wrote: "I LOVE THIS POST! A-freakin-Men!!! Amazing post that is so true! You can't like them all but you can't bitch when someone DOESN'T like your work. That's life....move the crap on! Geez!"Thanks, Annie! :D
Yet again Lisa Henry has written something full of truth and heart. I loved every word. I do hope that other authors read this. My opinion will not matter to all of them, as this is only my unprofessional opinion, but I do spend hundreds of dollars per month on books, so it is me that pays you, not those professional reviewers you give your books too.
Awilk -will work for books- wrote: "Yet again Lisa Henry has written something full of truth and heart. I loved every word. I do hope that other authors read this. My opinion will not matter to all of them, as this is only my unprofe..."Exactly, Awilk! Authors need to remember where their money comes from. And not just money, but support. Because if you start badmouthing readers, don't be surprised if you don't have any left by the time your next book comes out.
Lisa wrote: "Authors need to remember where their money comes from. And not just money, but support. Because if you start badmouthing readers, don't be surprised if you don't have any left by the time your next book comes out"No truer words!
Awilk wrote: "I do spend hundreds of dollars per month on books, so it is me that pays you, not those professional reviewers you give your books too. "Lisa wrote: "Authors need to remember where their money comes from. And not just money, but support."
I agree with both of you. I don't understand the idea of downplaying a reader's experience of a story, but I'm also not on GR or review sites a lot so I have no idea if this is a commonplace occurrence or just something that occurs now and then when an author is particularly invested in their work.
Either way, there's actually a lot an author can take from negative reviews. There are some things that are negatively mentioned in reviews of stuff I co-write that we already know about but sometimes people point out things that we didn't catch. Sometimes what they say might be something that is just the way it is and won't be changed, but sometimes they point out something really interesting or important. In my experience, readers are actually really good at identifying pieces of a story in a way that can be really constructive, regardless of whether they were being constructive in the way they said it.
Although for us the situation is different (free fiction rather than published), to me the importance of the reader doesn't change at all between the two. After all, whether you're a newbie or Stephen King, a writer can't improve without feedback, and readers are an excellent source. And without the readers, there wouldn't be a Stephen King in the first place.
Ais wrote: "Awilk wrote: "I do spend hundreds of dollars per month on books, so it is me that pays you, not those professional reviewers you give your books too. "Lisa wrote: "Authors need to remember where ..."
I agree there's a lot a writer can take from a negative review, if they're prepared to leave the entitled attitude at the door. And I don't know if the rules are that different when it comes to free fic and the relationship between the reader and the writer, at least it shouldn't be :)
A writer needs readers more than a reader needs another writer. So writers should treat the readers they do have with respect.
Lisa wrote: "A writer needs readers more than a reader needs another writer. So writers should treat the readers they do have with respect. "Agreed :)













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