How Books Earn Five-Star Ratings From Readers

An unforgettable world. A cast of lovable characters. A plot twist that leaves you breathless. What does it take for a book to earn a five-star rating?
To help us define perfection, we asked avid readers on Facebook and Twitter to finish this sentence: "When I give a book five stars, that means…" and listed some of the most popular answers. Which ones do you relate to? Share your favorites in the comments.
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1. "It cured my depression, cleared my acne, and aligned my chakras," says Brooklyn.
2. "That I think even the guy who loaded the book onto the delivery truck did a perfect job," says Heath.
3. "I called in sick to stay home and finish it and I will be pressing it into your hands next time I see you," says Judy.
4. "I couldn't put it down and was sad when it was done. A five-star book should pull you in and refuse to let you go," says Nathaniel.
5. "I want to read it again…and again…and again," says Denise.
6. "I will have difficulty finding my next read because this one really rocked me," says Tonya.
7. "I didn't guess the ending," says Claire.
8. "I forgot to sleep, eat, and everything else until I finished it," says Nenad.
9. "It means the characters came to matter to me; they were authentic; they drew me in and I came to care about them. A five-star book has changed me in some way that I can't even necessarily name." says Gracie.
10. "The author was able to drag me out of reality, paint a picture for me, and suck me into the story like I was truly there, every time I read that book," says Lizzie.
11. "That it profoundly affected me and changed the way I think or brought new meaning to my life," says Stephen.
12. "I was living the book, not just reading it," says Susan.
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Tell us what a five-star rating means to you in the comments!
Check out more recent articles:
February's Hottest New Releases
13 Ways of Coping with a Book Hangover
A Top Goodreads Reviewer Picks Her 26 Indie Books of the Season
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To help us define perfection, we asked avid readers on Facebook and Twitter to finish this sentence: "When I give a book five stars, that means…" and listed some of the most popular answers. Which ones do you relate to? Share your favorites in the comments.
1. "It cured my depression, cleared my acne, and aligned my chakras," says Brooklyn.
2. "That I think even the guy who loaded the book onto the delivery truck did a perfect job," says Heath.
3. "I called in sick to stay home and finish it and I will be pressing it into your hands next time I see you," says Judy.
4. "I couldn't put it down and was sad when it was done. A five-star book should pull you in and refuse to let you go," says Nathaniel.
5. "I want to read it again…and again…and again," says Denise.
6. "I will have difficulty finding my next read because this one really rocked me," says Tonya.
7. "I didn't guess the ending," says Claire.
8. "I forgot to sleep, eat, and everything else until I finished it," says Nenad.
9. "It means the characters came to matter to me; they were authentic; they drew me in and I came to care about them. A five-star book has changed me in some way that I can't even necessarily name." says Gracie.
10. "The author was able to drag me out of reality, paint a picture for me, and suck me into the story like I was truly there, every time I read that book," says Lizzie.
11. "That it profoundly affected me and changed the way I think or brought new meaning to my life," says Stephen.
12. "I was living the book, not just reading it," says Susan.
Tell us what a five-star rating means to you in the comments!
Check out more recent articles:
February's Hottest New Releases
13 Ways of Coping with a Book Hangover
A Top Goodreads Reviewer Picks Her 26 Indie Books of the Season
Catch Up Now: These Big Series All Have Books Coming Out Next Month
Comments Showing 1-50 of 155 (155 new)

1 Star : Hated it/DNF
2 Stars : Did not really like it but finished it and it had some qualities
3 Stars : It was okay but I won't read it again
4 Stars : I really liked it and would be okay to read it again
5 Stars : OMG I LOVED IT AND I NEED TO READ IT AGAIN AND YOU REALLY SHOULD TOO !




I'm particularly interested in the Black Mages series


5 stars: the book is outstanding, must read, enjoyable, well written, and has something about it that’s fresh, whether it’s style or content; well developed characters, thought out plot, and/or thoroughly researched.
4 stars: solidly written, enjoyable, well-done, maybe something that’s been done before but still exceptional in some way.
3 stars: middle of the road, not bad, enjoyable but maybe unremarkable in some way, writing was decent, but perhaps somewhat forgettable.
2 stars: poorly written and/or content was redundant, plot was perhaps unbelievable, characters were one dimensional, wouldn’t recommend.
1 star: could not finish, or the author did something unforgivable; painful to get through, severely bad writing, or something literarily offensive.


5 stars: the book is outstanding, must read, enjoyable, well written, and has something about it that’s fresh, whether it’s style or content; well developed characters, th..."
Same here.

* note:
It's difficult to rate a book when it is translated from different language. Sometimes, the book is good but the translation is the worst!
I suggest to add extra -separated- rating stars for translation and book cover.


My 5 stars rating books always need a whole night thinking about my review ‘cause I need to understand my feelings about that book and TRY to find the right words to explain them.


If it is a book of research (mostly academic), it should be based on a good literature review, following strong statements and evidences. Then I give 5 stars.

What happens after that remains to be seen. If the editing and grammar are poor, that's going to cost points. So are characters I don't give a damn about. If I abandon the book, it's an automatic 1-star.
You get the picture, I'm sure.

4 stars mean: I love it, or like it a lot
3 stars mean: It´s ok, i like it, it´s fun...
2 stars mean: it´s fine but its not for me
1 stars mean: i don´t like it




I try not to give too many 5 star ratings so that when I come across a truly exceptional book, I am not putting it into the company of other books which really were not as good.
Five stars, for me, means that the art and craft of writing came through and helped to carry the plot and storyline. The author show follow the advice "show, don't tell" when developing characters and not clutter up the story with a lot of incidents or details which have no connection to where the novel is headed.
For non-fiction books, I want to feel as if the author has truly presented a fair and complete picture of his topic and that the work is well researched.
I hate to read any book all the way through and feel it only deserves 1 or 2 stars (even zeros stars if there were such thing) and usually when I see a book headed toward a 1 or 2 star rating, I quit wasting time on it. About a quarter of the books I begin reading end up in this category and I neither finish nor rate them.




⭐⭐ do the characters have REAL depth? Female characters?
⭐⭐⭐ does the writer write well ?
⭐⭐⭐⭐ has the material been well researched ?
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ have I been moved, inspired





4. "I couldn't put it down and was sad when it was done. A five-star book should pull you in and refuse to let you go," says Nathaniel.

2 Stars: Meh
3 Stars: Liked it
4 Stars: Loved it
5 Stars: Holy $#!+"
Accurate! Hahahahaha

That and me thinking after the climax ''How the £"!$ didn't I see that coming?" always gets a five star rating.




2 star: I didn't like it that much, even though there were stuff that was good about the story
3 star: I liked it
4 star: I loved it
5 star: I loved it so much and it is flawless


- with an ending that was mind blowing
- a twist I never saw coming
- characters that became my best friends
- I read it at a frenzied pace then deliberately slowed down because I knew I would be depressed when it was over
- spiraled me into a reading slump because anything I read after it was not up to par
- something that I read over and over
- truly original content


2 stars - nope it was ok
3 stars - liked it
4 stars - really liked it
5 stars - kept me engrossed/engaged in the story. Couldn't put it down.

"
I agree - not so much that they start at 5-star but that they start as a blank slate. In the first evening reading I assess a rating based on my initial impression. Then the rating goes up or down based on how the book progresses.

* I couldn't put it down ;
* I relate somehow to the characters ;
* I was speachless when I finish it ;
* It took me some time to read again ;
* And it will always be a part of <3
I also give a book five stars when the plot is excellent.

Books like this are rare and special, and as such, I feel they deserve a higher rating than more common books that I enjoy on a less grand scale. Therefore, I end up giving mostly four-star ratings to very good books, saving my five-star ratings for the best of the best.
2 Stars: Meh
3 Stars: Liked it
4 Stars: Loved it
5 Stars: Holy $#!+