Beyond Mr. Darcy: Romantic Historical Fiction discussion
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April
(last edited Jan 11, 2013 01:26PM)
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Jan 11, 2013 01:25PM

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For me 1 star is a book I either didn't finish or I had to force myself to finish it. 2 stars is a book that isn't bad and I didn't have to force myself to finish it but I didn't find that enjoyable or it had many glaring problems (flat characters, bad writing, grammatical errors, historical inaccuracy, bad plot etc.). 3 stars is a book I liked, but wasn't blown away by. Sometimes these books have a few problems with them but the overall story or my enjoyment make up for it. 4 stars are books that blow me away, books I cannot put down. I don't give out a lot of 5 stars. The difference between a 4 star book and 5 star book has to do with how likely it is that I would want to re-read the book. If I definitely want to read the book again at some point I will give it 5 stars. I try to go with the goodreads definitions of the star ratings: 1 (Didn't like it), 2 (It was Ok), 3 (liked it), 4 (really liked it), 5 (Loved it).
To go with the grading analogy:
1 star=F
2 stars = D or C
3 stars = B
4 stars = A
5 stars = A+
As my grad school professors keep telling me, a B is a perfectly good grade. :-)
To go with the grading analogy:
1 star=F
2 stars = D or C
3 stars = B
4 stars = A
5 stars = A+
As my grad school professors keep telling me, a B is a perfectly good grade. :-)
