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Questions/Help Section > How many reviews does a book need to seem enticing?

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message 101: by K.P. (new)

K.P. Merriweather (kp_merriweather) | 512 comments I don't buy a lot of books for pleasure (i hit up the library when i can) so reading reviews don't faze me much. i don't really care if a book has a lot of 5 star reviews or a bunch of 1 star. as long as i find it interesting, i start with the blurb, then the first chapter. if i can't get to the second chappy, then it's not worth the trouble. the cover art isn't my thing, as i don't necessarily notice it (i'm colourblind, so i can't really appreciate awesome art, if it should be awesome).


message 102: by Tiger (new)

Tiger Gray (tiger_gray) | 290 comments I don't care how many reviews there are. I do care when it's an indie or self published book and it only has four and five star reviews. I find that suspicious.


message 103: by Tiger (new)

Tiger Gray (tiger_gray) | 290 comments Courtney wrote: "I figure more is merrier, especially on Amazon. I'm almost cool with the idea of having some "bad" reviews - like not five stars - because some people are easy, open-minded readers who are generou..."

Hell yeah I'll read your arc


message 104: by Tiger (new)

Tiger Gray (tiger_gray) | 290 comments Courtney wrote: "Okay - because I'm a sociology major and love stats - people post me some figures on their opinion of a decent/enticing amount of reviews.

Nothing against philosophy of what makes you ultimately ..."


zero. If the blurb sounds good I'll read it.


message 105: by Brian (new)

Brian  J. J. (jokeboy) | 35 comments Lauren (the Pink Avenger) wrote: "Objectively, as a reader I never really feel like trying anything with less than 100 reviews. 100+ with an average greater than/equal to 3 stars is my general comfort zone. Then I feel like, "OK! I..."

Wow Lauren. 100+. That's a lot. Is that a steadfast rule of yours? Just curious.


message 106: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) I feel if both readers and writers alike go by reviews alone, it's like damned if you do, damned if you don't.

I understand, from a reader's perspective, how awful it can feel when you read a book, get to the end, and feel ripped off, cheated, disappointed. I feel the same as a reader. The number of high rating reviews can help a reader weed through, but no real guarantees. But if you go by just the number of reviews while ignoring rating... still no real guarantee.

From a writer's perpective, if you happen to publish a book where everyone gives it 4 or 5 stars no matter how often you beg for negative reviews (like I have), then it's like pulling teeth trying to get reviews because everyone finds it suspicious. Damned if you do, damned if you don't...

It can be disheartening. Makes you feel like, well, damn, next time I'll publish a crappy book and get crappy reviews so that no one gets all suspious of me :P


message 107: by Yolanda (new)

Yolanda Ramos (yramosseventhsentinel) I read the synopsis, and if I like it I read the reviews. I'm not interested in how many reviews a book has, but am suspicious if there are only five star reviews. I like to read 3 and 4 star reviews, it gives you the good and the bad. The bad not necessarily meaning the whole book is bad, just things that the reader didn't like.


message 108: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer McDonald (JenMcDonald) | 158 comments I agree. I have bought books based on 1 star reviews. The reader would hate it because of gratuitous violence or sex, and I thought "this sounds like my kind of book."


message 109: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) I gave Take On With You by Oak Anderson a five star review. It's the best thriller I've read in years. I think it would be tragic to give any less than a 5 star review.


message 110: by Stuart (new)

Stuart Keane (StuartKeane) | 38 comments I don't think I've ever bought a book based on the reviews. True, it can look a little suss if they have nothing but glowing reviews but sometimes books are good enough to earn them. The review system is a bit unreliable anyway (all it takes is one person to hate the book and then its all downhill) so I go in blind and read them for myself.


message 111: by Heather (new)

Heather Blair (lovelyshivers) | 39 comments Lily wrote: "Mark wrote: "To be honest, at this point I'm thrilled with any review I get, even if it is just stars. But to go a little further, It's basically the same thing, rating something four or five star..."

Very astute response, Lily. :)


message 112: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Stuart wrote: "I don't think I've ever bought a book based on the reviews. True, it can look a little suss if they have nothing but glowing reviews but sometimes books are good enough to earn them. The review sys..."

Yes, that's exactly it. The more people post reviews and ratings based on what they want other people to think, as opposed to posting reviews and ratings based on what the reviewer thinks, the more the whole system will be lost... if it's not already lost.

Anyway, I don't mind this thread continuing, though it has gotten a bit out of hand lol The original question is, how many ARCs should be given out? Therefore, how many reviews are an acceptable number to start?

There's no way any author could hand out 100 ARCs to start lol

I offered the answer of five reviews. In my experience, that's a healthy start. If you get more, then great!


message 113: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Heather wrote: "Lily wrote: "Mark wrote: "To be honest, at this point I'm thrilled with any review I get, even if it is just stars. But to go a little further, It's basically the same thing, rating something four..."

I have no idea what my answer was, it didn't show up lol


message 114: by Heather (new)

Heather Blair (lovelyshivers) | 39 comments If a bad review is up front and center, I might slow down and look a little closer, to see if there is a reoccurring theme in the reviews on something that would make a book less desirable for me, and it might make me pull a sample first, to see what I think.

But I am far more pulled in by the blurb and what I read in the 'Look Inside' feature. Whether the book has 100 reviews or no reviews at all, the writing is what pulls me in. Covers not so much, unless they are really appalling or over the top.


message 115: by Tiger (new)

Tiger Gray (tiger_gray) | 290 comments @Lily Well, I think the only real answer is, as many as the author can afford. EBooks are a bit easier to just give away, but print copies are often precious and should be given sparingly. My company has a relationship with a printer who does our books at a very competitive rate, but they're still quite expensive when you're ordering 200 at a time.


message 116: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Tiger wrote: "@Lily Well, I think the only real answer is, as many as the author can afford. EBooks are a bit easier to just give away, but print copies are often precious and should be given sparingly. My compa..."

Fair point. Print and digital, two different things. For a print ARC, it will be 100% dependent on the publisher. Well, I stand by my answer. Five seems fair all around.


message 117: by Tiger (new)

Tiger Gray (tiger_gray) | 290 comments I agree with five, though personally I think I'd hand out more like twenty plus ebooks, five print. Though I think I've actually given away about ten print copies now :P


message 118: by Lily (new)

Lily Vagabond (lilyauthor) Hehe, I've lost count of how many PDFs I've handed out.


message 119: by Justin (new)

Justin (justinbienvenue) | 1275 comments Mod
Hmm..I would first say it depends on whether or not a reader uses reviews as a way to determine if they want to read the book. If they do then I would say maybe 7-10 and anymore after that of course would be a yes.


message 120: by Courtney (new)

Courtney Wells | 1629 comments Mod
I sometimes approach a book with the mindset that it needs a little love - like "poor you with 6 reviews. You sound like a nice book, let me help".


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