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What are some book turn-offs before you read?
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Guaranteed? Uh, sure....."
Ah, my bad. Saw, "can," and mentally replaced it with, "will."

Yes, kind of a given for me. I don't read blurbs either. I check out the cover, then open the book and read the first page. If it hooks me in within a couple sentences, then I'll buy it. My system seems to work so far, I think there's only been one book I was disappointed by, in which the writing would be really strong for a couple pages, and then I'd read a paragraph that would throw me off with how wooden it was or a weird metaphor or something, lol.

Guaranteed? Uh, sure....."
Ah, my bad. Saw, "can," and mentally replaced it with, "will." "
Or 'might', but that's not very persuasive.


Also, I hate it, really, really hate it when I find misspellings in a book. That one misspelling can make me look after other misspellings without even thinking about it. And I remember those misspellings so well too (i think she was killed in page 345 or something... that must be it, cause I remember on page 340 the author wrote 'bnana' instead of banana)

Yeah...no. Sent it back unread.

You have NO IDEA how relieved I am to hear of your preferences in romance. (I just wrote a true cross-genre MS, and publishing research on what readers want from romance has been depressing till just now). This makes me incredibly happy.
And I agree with you (and many others, apparently); it's not just the story, it's the cover. How am I supposed to hold my head up in an airport, (or school), reading something with a Fabio-esque cover? Heck, when Rolling Stone had Tyler (werewolf Twilight-guy) frolicking in the sand on their front cover, I actually ripped it off before getting on a plane with it...
Kris wrote: "I never thought of myself as a book snob before but now that I have upwards of 1000 books on my kindle that I've been hoarding for cheap or free...when it comes time to pick a book to read, there a..."
This doesn't sound like snobbery; it sounds like having sense and taste. (And now that I've labeled myself as a snob...) I don't think I've read enough stories with more than one author to have made the same determination; maybe because I have the same opinion that you do, but it's been subconscious till now?

I'm going to join with Wilmar in requesting an example. Have you ever read POV-switches done well? And what kind of warning is effective for that (other than a double-blurb from each character's POV on the back)?

Those books arent high art, but they're damned gripping, at least.
But did you mean POV switches in the MIDDLE of a chapter? Yes, that sucks. Every time. My wife shows me romance novels that are done that way, and we just laugh and laugh and laugh.

Cassandra, thanks for the opinion on my cover! I just noticed it in the thread now!
Agree. For A Game of Thrones it works wonderfully. But Martin always makes it perfectly clear who's pov we're getting - no confusion.
I hate first person pov switches. in Shiver. I get mixed up with which "I" I'm reading about. There's been a few romances like that too. Not many thankfully. Not a fan.
I'm pretty open to read almost anything though.
I hate first person pov switches. in Shiver. I get mixed up with which "I" I'm reading about. There's been a few romances like that too. Not many thankfully. Not a fan.
I'm pretty open to read almost anything though.
Sumi wrote: "Michelle wrote: "I can't stand it when the book has a really vague back description! I will put up with a crude cover, though a good title is a must. However, if the description tells me nothing ab..."
I think I like you, Sumi!
Traci...OH MY GOODNESS I HEAR YOU. I ONLY switch PoVs in different chapters. I am having to edit that nowadays...but sheesh. I haaate being confused about narration; your readers ought to do some work, but not that much!
I think I like you, Sumi!
Traci...OH MY GOODNESS I HEAR YOU. I ONLY switch PoVs in different chapters. I am having to edit that nowadays...but sheesh. I haaate being confused about narration; your readers ought to do some work, but not that much!

One-stars from obvious illiterates or the mean spirited will not put me off, or the ones that start 'I saw the movie and the book was _so_ different' or 'I don't like this genre' ;) In fact, this kind of review makes me want to read the book, if only out of spite!
However, if the review raises a point that would also annoy me I take it as a warn-off from that book. Life's too short to spend time on books I'll want to delete after reading.

cough*cough*cussler*cough!

I just laughed, snorted earl grey tea out of my nose and then choked, all because you wrote "killed hundreds of men with his nipples alone". So thank you, thank you very much.

Crowded covers or covers with terrible, bright fonts that don't match with the picture. Since I am a major fantasy reader, that is a huge obstacle. I go so far as to completely ignore the cover when reading about the book or perusing Amazon. Some of my favorite books have had covers that would have IMMEDIATELY turned me away.
The other major turn off is typos. I encounter them often in digital formats. I've learned that this is a BIG issue with digital. I've read the same book in paper and digital and found no problem (or few) in the paper while there were rampant issues with the digital.

So, low avg. rating is my biggest turn-off.

A book where the author spends more time trying to convey how witty they are, rather than in writing a decent yarn.
And I TRY not to judge books by their cover, since I'm uncertain how much control an author has over this. But, yeah, I just can't see myself ever picking up a book where you've got a shot from behind of some nearly anorexic gal with a tattoo on her back (yeah, I know what they're called, but I find the term as offensive as I find such tattoos unattractive) holding a stake/pistol/dagger behind said back. And given the sheer number of books lately that seem to feature this image on their cover, paintings of this sort must be close to being a cottage industry. Bizarre, that.
And a curious recent example: I liked James Patterson's Witch & Wizard YA series...with the original covers. But these new covers just don't work for me at all. I have nothing against pretty girls. I have nothing against pretty girls on the covers of books.
But once the thought occurred to me that as a young teen I'd have likely been willing to read the books with the old covers but not the new, I just couldn't shake it. Admittedly I was last described as a "young teen" sometime around the dinosaur extinction event, and also that such a prejudice may say something less than complimentary about the me that I was back then. But it just struck me rather forcibly that somebody had decided to make a series that should have appealed to boys and girls equally into one that no boy would realistically now look at. Unless some sort of drastic change in the way I viewed the world as a young male and the way young males of the present age view it has occurred, I guess. Possible, but I rather doubt it. It is almost as though publishers have simply given up trying to market to boys, if that makes any sense.
Oh, piddle. End of rant. Sorry.
Oh, and for whatever reason I simply couldn't get past 75 pages of the fourth book in the series. One issued solely with the "new" cover in place. I thought it was because the book was poorly written compared to the first three, but perhaps I was simply put off by the cover?


So many people seem to think they can write the next Lord of the Rings or Song of Ice and Fire, but there is more to it than some rudimentary world-building.
Ugh. Thanks Andrew. Pointlessly arcane names drive me crazy.

Typos don't bother me over much unless they are terrible, so long as the story is good.
Inconsistancy or unbelievability (is that a word?) as well.




I agree, it needs at least 330 pages ;)

Excellent :D


http://www.goodreads.com/book/photo/1...
PS
Not trying to self-promote, so don't even click on the book, read anything about it, try to peek at the reviews and ranking. Forbidden. Just comment on the cover: click on the link to see a bigger cover.


1st person POV isn't an issue. Head hopping can be disconcerting. If a few typos are per page it is an issue. Two or three in 400 pages might not be a problem for the first edition ;)

Plus first person POV.


Brittany, I was just going to say books with girls in ball gowns on the cover. Sooooo many of those. But I'm in for minimalist covers and it sounds like that is a turn off to many people.


was kind of a crummy cover, but I love the book. But a poorly-written blurb - with typos, grammar errors, or awkward wording - is a huge turn-off.


http://www.goodreads.com/book/photo/1...
PS
Not trying to self-promote, so don't even clic..."
Massimo, one issue I would have with that cover is it doesn't tell me what type of book it's going to be. While the image is sort of pretty, I don't get "Man struggles with morals in a suddenly post-apocalyptic world" from that.
I've always thought a cover is like a movie poster- you should be able to identify the genre, main character and at least SOME hint of the story from it. (i.e. cops fight gritty bloodthirsty drug lords with huge personal costs should have a very different cover from cops fight drug lords and wacky hijacks ensue.)
Just my thoughts as a cover snob and a fellow self-published author.
Shuvom


Well said! Quite hilarious and very true; let's leave the fantasy in the correct genre... (It would be cool to see a guy fight with nipples alone-consider those pecs! LOL)
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Guaranteed? Uh, sure.....