Constant Reader discussion
Constant Reader
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A Failure of Imagination Why Bookish and other recommendation engines fall short


Goodreads has actually come up with some very good choices for me, and Amazon on occasion. Have no idea what Audible plugs in for me, because it is most often off-the-radar completely. I do wish it would stop suggesting Gone Girl (which I read in print). :-)

Very seldom do recommendations seem to work for me. I rely most on several of my Goodreads friends - and the generous people here who take the time to share their insights on their reading experiences.
Even the award winners don't seem to make it often for me. Sometimes, but not always. My reading mood is also a factor which noone or nothing can predict. I am hopeless and read all kinds of genres. So much for predictability.

Exactly. What are they going to suggest for me because I like Goodnight Moon?





There is a function on Amazon that allows one to edit their recommendations...you are able to delete items such as you mention. I know, I've certainly used it. It's quite handy. :)



Exactly. What are they going to suggest for me because I like Goodnight Moon?"
On Amazon, you can tell it not to use certain purchases for recommendations. I get a lot of Kindle books for my mother - I tell it not to use those for my recommendations because we like very different books.
I tend to rely more on GR and Amazon "also bought" for new books.


Amazon is not bad, I will at least take a look at the books they recommend, but I also read reviews in the Washington Post, The New Yorker, National Review, and The New Criterion.

Ha! Good point!

Exactly -- I get into enough trouble on my very own most of the time. Always did. THEN I found constant Reader. Now Goodreads. I just have to look at things and I find books hopping onto the lists - hee-hee-hee.

Absolutely. And the next one suggested might be absolutely fantastic!


Hah, already there, so there is no turning back now. Too late, too late. lol
Sara wrote: "Cateline wrote: "Oh, pish. No sucha thing as "too many books"!! /giggle-snort/"
Absolutely. And the next one suggested might be absolutely fantastic!"
I count on that!! :D

Exactly. What are they going to suggest for me because I like Goodnight Moon?"
well, goodnight moon is a very good book:)

Really its just another example of corporations falling-all-over-themselves to tap into 'Big Data'. But BD is nothing without the right methodology; even with *good* processing it doesn't mean much. But you can't tell them that.
Personally, I find myself trusting any other recommendation source for myself--other than myself-- decreasing as the publishing industry exhibits increasing havoc. The more they 'go digital' the less rope I'm willing to grant them.
The word 'editor' used to mean something to me. Not so much anymore though. The more they change direction with every slight shift in the wind, the less I'm convinced they have my best interests at heart. Its a sad feeling.
I would give more credit perhaps to someone with a solid track record, someone who takes a stand for tradition, perhaps a writer I admire. Harlan Ellison, for example, has good things to say these days.

Exactly. What are they going to suggest for me because I like Goodnight Moon?"
well, goodnight moon is a very good book:) ."
Granted, but I'm a little past that stage.




Very seldom do recommendations seem to work for me. I rely most on several of my Goodreads friends - and the generous people here who take the time t..."
Roxanne -- much of what you say fits me very well also.
Amazon plugs many books I've alread read -- and the loss of the click to say I've already read this or I own it has left me to ignore them totally.


Good point, Tiffani! That's what I look for in reviews: why exactly the reader did or didn't like a book. If a reviewer writes that a book was "too slow and atmospheric," I get a better picture than if he or she just says it was "long and boring". Unfortunately, reviewers (myself included!)can't always pin down what exactly they enjoyed or disliked in a book (I never know what "well-written" actually means to the person writing the review!)and press reviews by book critics tend to divulge and analyse so much that they sometimes spoil the experience for me, although I love reading in-depth reviews on a novel after I've read it.

Elf Ahearn
A Rogue in Sheep's Clothing


Occasionally I'll read a review and feel compelled to buy the book, but more often than not, I rely on word filtering down to me. Sometimes Jon Stewart will talk to an author; sometimes I'll read a review in the New Yorker; but mostly I'll pick up a book based on what a friend said about it or that I've heard the title "in the wind." So far, Amazon doesn't know me well enough to make my picks for me.


Occasionally I'll read a review and feel compelled to buy the book, but more oft..."
Elf, you are way too generous ... actually, you can just go into YOUR ACCOUNT and then YOUR ORDERS on Amazon and then look at all the items, books and everything else, that you have bought over the years.
And now that Amazon knows me so well, I guess that probably means that the National Security Agency knows me just as well. And if they do have that information and combine it with Google and Verizon info, they probably know me better than any one entity. A little disturbing. To think that we used to be concerned about authorities having access to our library borrowing records. The world has changed.

Yeah, Sherry, I only have about 800 books listed in a spreadsheet as the next book(s) to read. The list grows far faster than progress made in working down the list. I love having the list, but it also slightly depresses me. In the back(?) of my mind, the list feels like a tower of books that is going to collapse on me.

I have an entire library of books, only about a hundred of which I've read. Now that I have a Kindle, it's so lightweight and easy to read that I keep buying instead of lifting volumes off the shelf. Having all those books makes me happy, though. The compulsion continues...


I have an entire library of books, only about a hundred of which I've read. Now that I have a Kindle, it's so lightweight and easy to re..."
Oh, Elf, we actually are getting buried under Kindles also. ;-) I've bought five of them so far. My wife and I still have three of these. I read with a new Paperwhite and older one with the keyboard. (One broke ... and my daughter-in-law has the first one that I bought.)

I completely agree. While a cover will lure me in, if I don't find the first paragraph compelling, I'll put it right back down.

We resisted for quite a while. Then we bought one each of the plain, keyboard type.
I resisted further, until a few months ago I caved and bought a Kindle Fire. You can get online with it as well, so it feeds two compulsions. :) Reading and surfing. I'd resisted because I thought the backlighting would bother me. It doesn't. You can adjust the background, so now I have the sepia background and slightly enlarged font. Perfect.

FIRST paragraph alone? Wow. That's a challenge for any author!

FIRST paragraph alone? Wow. That's a challenge for any author!"
Sometimes all it takes is a good first sentence. There are a surprising number of books with amazing first sentences :-)


"
Very true, though in some cases, I can't help wondering if the author (or even the editor/publisher) has ensured the first sentence is captivating, perhaps at the expense of the rest of the text.

Books mentioned in this topic
A Tale for the Time Being (other topics)A Rogue in Sheep's Clothing (other topics)
A Rogue in Sheep's Clothing (other topics)
The Black Echo (other topics)
The Sparrow (other topics)
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/11...#