UK Book Club discussion
Your Reading Experience
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How do you choose your books?


Personally
1)Recommendations from friends - see above /word of mouth.
2)Blurb/description- look inside.
3)Recommendations from social media including GR.
4)Authors I like/already follow.
5)Book club recs, suggestions on GR.
6)Discussions on GR, discussions with authors.
7)Recommendations from Amazon (sometimes)
Cover often doesn't bother me, although I have taken a second look at a striking cover then read the blurb. But I have read very good books with not such good covers and bought books with great covers that have been crap.
Certainly not because it is popular unless it is an author I already follow.
Reviews, sometimes, not often.

I was wondering if as I reader I was abysmally different to everybody else because some of the advice doesn't make sense to me...
I'll see...
Cover and title is the first thing anyone notices.......so it needs to be eye catching and fit your genre to lead the potential reader into the blurb. From my magazine publishing days, the cover was always the biggest factor in increased sales bar promotional ad.spend and I'm sure it's no different with books. You can't control recommendations or reviews and promotion generally costs money but covers/titles are within your control and relatively cheap to get right.

But title and cover are important as well as these will attract me to read the book in the first place.
Since using this sight recommendations and what others are reading have also become more important in my reading choices.



I'm planning to go for e and paper copies for the new YA series I'm planning (if beta readers' comments are positive).
This has been very helpful. Even when friends have different tastes it is usually a good guide...
Thanks for all your help.



-Book cover, need to be done in a way that is attractive, very important.
- Other readers' reviews, especially Amazon
- Writers and series you like, yes I do keep my elegance to writers that I like and try and reed all they write, even if it becomes mundane
- Book descriptions, if it doesn't catch me on the first two,three sentences, that's bad sign
- the same principle I use when pre-reading it, if the first sentence of the book is not catchy I probably wont buy it.
-Recommendations or ads in social media (Facebook, Twitter, GoodReads, LibraryThing etc.)
-Price, needs to be within my personal affordability range, but if I really want a specific book, many times I wait, save up and buy it nether the less.
- for me the purpose of the book is important, does it make a statement, is there any special cause for the book? Can it be a life-changing book? Does it have merit and purpose? If yes, I will be more interested in it.



If you buy e-books in Kindle store do you just check in Amazon or have you already decided which book you want beforehand? Do you use different criteria for e-books?
I tend to check GR reviews as well as Amazon reviews on any kindle before i get it however cheap it is.

There's a discussion thread about a related issue to the paid review issue in the group titled Sockpuppetry, where authors themselves or their friends give a book great reviews......think it's in the Reading Experience folder.

Book group (the one I meet in person) has lead me to buy books I may not have otherwise and I notice books on Goodreads that have some buzz about them. The Hunger Games for example - didn't know about those books apart from people on GR chatting about them. If a lot of people are saying good things, I reckon it's worth exploring. I don't take any notice of a handful of reviews on Amazon, I don't trust them.
If a writer is known entity and someone that I like then I will be drawn to their books regardless of reviews, those purchases are easy.
Although I scan the literary supplement for critics reviews, I can't say that I look in any great detail but I am influenced by TV Book Groups and shows like The Book Show, if the writer or the story captures my attention, I'll feel the need to read for myself.
I notice various award short lists and even long lists, I'm quite influenced by who appears on those too.
Bargains on Kindle store are great but after immediate novelty wore off, I still only buy if I really want the book - it's too hard to figure out what's good and what's not!

Actually I did it once weirdly during an period where I WASN'T BOOK READING. It's Donna Tartt, The Little Friend.
That was years ago.
I WILL read it.
One day.

I love my kindle fire HD. I've only started reading again for 4 months now and boy oh boy do I have a LOT of good books to catch up on.
However as someone with asperger's/dyslexia AND depression (Sometimes it's a struggle to keep sit and focus) I find kindle an God send. Problems reading the book? No problem, grab the audiobook. Can't keep still? Text to speech it (Although I'm not sure how to highlight the words as it's being read to me). Suddenly I can't stop reading! Something about carrying millions of books on your person, in your bag, in your pocket that makes it (IMO) so fricking cool!

I rather get book recs through the grapevine, websites like these and interests.


Having spent nearly two days stuck in an airport (finally back home) must say it was a life saver...




I've been interested in this as wqell but not seen anyones I've been interested in as late.


Yes, personal recommendations by people who have similar taste are up there on my list.



When I have picked up a book that appeals to me, I read the blurb. And secondly I read the first sentences of the book and skip through it. First sentences are rather important as a book has to grab my intention from the very beginning. With audio books it's more the narration. I listen to books that I would normally not read myself which is a good thing. With a paper book I always read the end as well.
I read comments on books and reviews as well. I do keep in mind though that it's not because someone likes a book that I will like it too and vice versa. But it sort of broadens my choices and somehow the titles or the authors' names get stuck in my head. Certainly when books are mentioned a lot here on GR and the story seems to appeal to me, I can give it a try.
The title, the art work, the blurb, the first sentences, the description of the story....are sort of the impulses on which I buy or take out a book from the library. What is more important is the story and the characters. I can very easily put aside a book that I have read partly when the story starts to bore me. When I don't bother anymore to read a book within two days or a week (when it's an audio book), it's not worth my attention and it's not for me.
Books here in Belgium are expensive. It's more interesting for me to buy a book in English as they are half the price of a Dutch book. I very easily buy books second hand. And there is also the library, where I can reserve books online. For audio books I pay a monthly amount that allows me to choose any book I like.
I read both in Dutch, English and German. And listen to audio books in English and German. I mostly know from the previews I read in English if I want to read it in Dutch or in English - as every language has its charm so to speak.


Goodreads seems to be a good source of recommendations although sometimes with series I have the problem that I might not have read initial book and don't have time to catch up.
Stuart you're right. It probably depends on what type of reader you are. I know people who usually read only within a certain genre and rarely deviate from that, and others that will try a bit of everything or go through phases...I've often been surprised by books people have lent me or recommended to me that I wouldn't have picked up myself.
If I really love a book I often will try and catch up other books by the same author but I guess it depends if it is the story I like or the style of writing, although at least I tend to check what else they have written and do a bit of reading around it like Danielle.

Yes, personal recommendations by people who have similar taste are up there on my list."
It was a manga book called absolute boyfriend, it was good and in the series it made me cry and happy at the same time - i love books that are able to do that even if they are manga books, which some people say aren't real books, and to them i'll tell them they have no clue of what they're talking about. lolz
i'll recommend it to anyone for a short series read as well as something light hearted in a way, its not created to be fact or brinier of great knowledge.


Have you read the Lovely Bones? We read it at our Book Club and it really does make you feel a lot of things!

Just realised I'm greatly influenced by character names. In English language novels - ie UK/US/Oz/Can etc much prefer traditional British names to the US penchant for more odd - to my eyes/ears anyway - names, and the current craze in the UK for daft celebrity led names and unique names just to stand out. Therefore much more likely to read a book if the lead character is called Ian, Steve, Phil or Rory than say Tiger, Keegan, Bubba or Boo......sorry was watching golf on tv last night lol.


Now a days. It's a mixture of everything. If its a favourite author, i'll buy. If its good good reviews on here, I'll buy. If it looks pretty or if someone has recommended it i'll buy. I'm big on recommendations as most of the time its a book, genre i'd probably never choose if it was left to me. x


2. Synopsis. Just enough to introduce main characters, plot and genre.
3. Recommendations from trusted friends
4. Linked buys. People who bought this also bought......
5. Price. If it's reasonably priced I'll try all sorts.
6. Covers have become less important, but I have to admit that in a bookshop I might be drawn to interesting covers, more so than with e-purchases
Books mentioned in this topic
My Animals and Other Family (other topics)Diaries 1969-1979: The Python Years (other topics)
Click Me Happy! (other topics)
I'm a self-published author and have read plenty on advice on to how to promote your work and sell your books. Of course the basis is writing a good book (and that's a matter of opinion) but then, what makes you choose a book?
I would like to check readers opinions as not convinced by much of the advice. I personally follow writers I like, read the description of the book, might look at reviews...
Suggestions:
1) Book cover
2) Critics reviews
3) Other readers' reviews
4) Personal recommendations from friends, peers
5) Publicity and advertisements
6) Writers and series you like
7) Book descriptions
8) Recommendations or ads in social media (Facebook, Twitter...)
9) Book club recommendations
10) Price
11) Any others?
Thanks so much for you answers:
Olga