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How do you write your book reviews?
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[deleted user]
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Nov 12, 2013 01:15AM
I've been meaning to ask. How do you write your book review for this particular genre. Do you have a different criteria when you review a Beyond Reality type of book, as opposed to say a mystery/suspense or a young adult contemporary novel? How do you approach your book review? Please feel free to share your comments here.
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I am not really a "reviewer" in any true sense of the word. I generally just write what I liked and disliked about a book, or what I thought was well done and what could have been done better. I do not generally write a plot synopsis and I try to avoid spoilers. And that's what I do regardless of the genre.
It depends how much I have to say about a book. I don't review every book I've read - I don't have the time for that! When I do write a review, I generally list things I liked and things I didn't. There's no big difference to how I'll write based on genre.

My reviews are typically two or three things I found striking about the book, whether plus or minus. Though a character-centric reader, and a feminist, I get bored if I only focus on those aspects of a book.
A few times I've come up with a really cool sentence that became the linchpin of an entire review. Fun when it happens, if rare. I always recognize those sentences when I go back to re-read, too.

(No synopsis or summary, they can be found easily)
Characters/characterization
Plot & Story
Pacing& Writing
When applicable: World building & Magic for fantasy or Science for SF
Conclusion
I also sometimes use quotes from the book when I feel like it. Such a review will usually take me about 1 hour to write. Oh and I NEVER used gifs... don't get me started about that one... please!

And under normal cicumstances I'm not the very first and only person, who writes a review for this book and there are many reviewers, who do a remarkable job.
So I always try to do something else with my reviews. I try to take one aspect, structure or one defining atmospheric part of the novel and try to recreate this in my review.
May it be that I do a review written in poetry, a review addressed at literature students in the year 2113, a con job review or a murder mystery, where the review reader can read the review and chase four murderers at the same time.
For a book about stories within stories within stories, of course I did a review within a review within a review.
I often use dialogue between made-up persons, celebrities or movie characters, who relate to the feeling of the book.
I always try to challenge myself to transcend the review format. Sometimes that works out pretty well, at other times it's more of a meh for trying.^^


Ewww. Tacky behavior from an author.


I have had that happen to me a few times. I really do not care for it and have gotten to the point where I don't review self published books.



I don't usually write a review for a book if I didn't like it, because I feel that is just my personal opinion. Someone else might like it, and I don't want to write something that might discourage others from giving it a try. In doing so, I feel that's disrespecting the author.
I only write a negative review if it is something I feel seriously denigrates a topic, group, etc. but in Beyond Reality type books, I'm glad that it is extremely rare I ever come across one like that. I think that's a way this "category" differs from other types of fiction, and why I like them so much.
I don't agree with authors arguing about a review because that serves no true purpose except perhaps their ego. When a reader/reviewer posts something extremely subjective or some thing that is actually wrong (regarding a fact, topic, or something like that) or tells others not to buy or read a certain author, I completely don't agree with such behavior. In doing so, that is asking for a boycott of an author just on their opinion, affecting their livelihood. Just the same, again, I don't agree with an author confronting them over it. I think it just shows something self-important about that reader/reviewer and their personality.

My approach is to focus on the quality of the writing, the characters, and the plot. For scifi, is it unique or derivative? Are the worlds/politics/aliens well described and different than human equivalents? For military books, am I drawn in to the battles, can I feel the tension?
I compare the book to others that are similar in plot or style. Most of my reviews are 4-stars, as I try to select books that I'm confident that I will like - based on other reviews here on GR. I give out 5-stars for outstanding creativity and/or writing. I occasionally write negative reviews, usually for poor writing or editing. I mark a book as DNF, but this is rare.

While I comment on elements common to the genre, I don't differentiate how I review by fiction genre. For non-fiction, I do include a note about how accurate or up-to-date it is to the best of my knowledge.
There's a lot of interesting criteria for individual book reviewing here. Thanks for the time sharing your thoughts everyone.