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What makes you decide whether to buy a book or not?
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I utilize the Amazon discussion threads, and several of Goodreads avenues (listopias, recommendations), but always look up each book's reviews (by my friends) to see what they have to say, before making my final decision.
Of course, book covers and blurbs play a factor in determining if I feel a book is worth even researching.

These days, I just end up getting indie books pushed at me so I read a wider spectrum. It challenges me, but leaves little room for my own desires.
Sadly, I think many use the browse Amazon theory, which relies on your book climbing high up the rankings for people to even know it's there.
The advertising on GR/Amazon seem to yield little or no sales.
Word of mouth is also a popular method, but again you're relying on someone realising you're there in the first place.
Whichever way you turn it's tough to get that initial foot in the door.
Blogs seem popular, and has been recommended as a way to start to 'get your name out there', so I have set a blog up now. There is an 'Advice fo Nw Authors' section on it (sorry, at work so this is the only link I can grab right now):
http://tlclarkauthor.blogspot.co.uk/2...
2 years in, and I'm still trying to get noticed. :-/

Referrals from other readers who enjoy many of the same books as me, might also get me interested. Finally, it may be part of a book group read.
Otherwise, I put next to zero stock in the internet to make a decision on whether to buy a book or not. No formula is going to be perfect.




What Justin said. :)

Price doesn't really matter to me, if I think it is a quality read. I consider it an investment to my soul. ;)


Reviews don't sway me as the connection between writer and reader varies so much and I would have missed some great, but poorly reviewed books over the years.


Covers never dissuade me if the book seems interesting enough. I used to read a series of pulp fantasy novels and the in house designer was horrific. But the stories were usually decent

I've seen covers that were edging on the side of bad that I read because something else grabbed me. But if the art/effort is actually horrific, horrendous, or offends me in some way, I won't pick it up.

Authors I know and trust.
Author earned a B.R.A.G. Medallion. I've never read a bad book that earned this honor.
Author is a member of Sisters in Crime. I've never read a bad book by a SinC member.
Word of "mouth" on GR.
Word of real mouths from friends.
Reviews that say something, not just blather.
My book club chose it.




Does the book appear to be thoroughly researched and one to provide new insights? Does it appear to be well-written? Or does it have the ability to entertain?
I find some books through searching library catalogues. Sometimes, I find them by listening to book reviews on NPR. Other times, word of mouth or industry suggestions. Also, I'll read more books by a particular author when I find an author I like.
In the case of Web technology (JavaScript for example), when I read contents like this, I made my decision right away, as I got a good gut feel around how in-depth it is, and what knowledge I can get from it, and how much do I like the writing style.
"Loose Equals Versus Strict Equals
...
A very common misconception about these two operators is: "== checks values for equality and === checks both values and types for equality.” While that sounds nice and reasonable, it’s inaccurate. Countless well-respected JavaScript books and blogs have said exactly that, but unfortunately they’re all wrong.
The correct description is: "== allows coercion in the equality com‐ parison and === disallows coercion.”
..."
So I have been thinking is there a new and better way of getting recommendations and recommending/promoting books.
Look forward to hearing your opinions.