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How do you rate books?
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That said, I often struggle with YA and children's books in terms of rating because it's not fair to deduct points for complexity in the same way i might for adult books.

5: Favorite
4: Loved It
3: Liked It
2: It’s Okay
1: Hated It
Now, there are some books that while I didn't enjoy them very much, I understand their importance or they opened my eyes to something. For example, I didn't much enjoy Fahrenheit 451 and only gave it 2 stars, but I get why it's important and I appreciate its moral lesson. I also only gave East of Eden 3 stars, but the concept of "timshel" was life-altering and really opened my eyes. And, then there are some, coughCatcher in the Ryecough, that I don't get or understand why people love so much and consider them "literature."


5: Favorite
4: Loved It
3: Liked It
2: It’s Okay
1: Ha..."
I too rate books based on my enjoyment level, although sometimes I will read a book that I didn't exactly enjoy but I still found it a book worth reading. My scale is somewhat similar to yours.


I agree completely. I think there are some books that are worth reading whether they're enjoyable or not. I usually don't enjoy many classics. They usually take me a little longer to read because I don't find them quite as gripping. But, I still think they're worth reading if only to understand the world more or any allusions to the characters/plot. I usually make a note of that in my review.
If I read a retelling, I always read the original first so I have something to use as a baseline. Usually, I like the more recent story better, though. It's like how I feel about the Beatles' music. I love their songs, but I usually love covers done by other bands better.

5: Favorite
4: Loved It
3: Liked It
2: It’s Okay
1: Hated it..."
I have a reasonably similar scale:
5: Favourite. Devastated that it's finished. Give me more. Now.
4: Highly recommended. Waving pom-poms on the sidelines.
3: Enjoyed it. Happy enough to suggest someone else read it. Pretentiously critical nose is twitching over bits though.
2: Meh. Not really worth bothering with.
1: WTF.
I don't deliberately judge different genres differently - but I've no doubt I have an unconscious bias as there are some genres I just enjoy more than others.

5 - One of the best books I have ever read. Will stay in my mind forever.
4 - Really enjoyable and highly recommendable.
3 - Quite good but there were faults.
2 - Don't bother
1 - Couldn't finish
I've stopped giving ratings to did not finish books lately though. I don't think it fair to rate a book that I haven't completed.

"When I rate books I begin my rating based on how much I like the book. 2.5 stars means I feel ambivalent about it."
Then I add or subtract stars points by .25 based on a range of other criteria including:
1) writing quality & style (e.g., clarity, simplicity vs. complexity, use of humor, wit, satire, harmony, rhythm, effectiveness of dialogue).
2) characters & character development (e.g. are characters flat or 3-dimensional, do characters experience growth throughout the book, etc.).
3) plot (any devices of plot complication or resolution, is there sub-plot, etc.)
4) setting (e.g., a sense of atmosphere, scenic effects used & effective, etc.).
5) novelty or uniqueness (e.g., writing style, story, etc.)
6) contribution/influence (influences– on society, the genre, future books, movies).
7) knowledge learned (this is a strictly personal category since I don’t assume that information that is new to me will be new to everyone else and vice versa).
8) depth (e.g., is this just a good story or does the author do more than tell a story? use of symbolism, motifs, parody, allegory).
For example, Dan Brown’s Inferno got a 3 b/c I really enjoyed it (4 star) but subtracted a star (deducting .25 for each item) for writing quality, lack of substantial character development, little depth, and lack of novelty. In contrast, I rated Grass’ The Tin Drum a 3.5 b/c I disliked it (2 stars) but added stars for writing style, novelty of writing style & plot, contribution, and depth.
So, my final rating system will look something like this but will vary according to criteria I listed above:
★ Hated it, & no redeeming additional qualities noted. Recommend avoiding it.
★★ Disliked it, may have 1 redeeming quality (writing style, novelty, etc).
★★★ Liked it or may have a few interesting qualities.
★★★★ Really liked it & it has at least a couple interesting qualities.
★★★★★ Loved almost everything about it. Only a few, if any, minor limitations noted.

4 - Really enjoyable and highly recommendable.
3 - Quite good but there were faults.
2 - Don't bother
1 - Couldn't finish.."
That's about my rubric as well. I sometimes think I give out 5's too freely though, but I factor how much I enjoyed reading something. Even it something wasn't a masterpiece but I have a lot of FUN reading it, it will generally still get a 5 outta me (Big Little Lies is a great example).
I don't think I've ever given a book a 1 star though. If I can't finish a book- I'll just delete it off my shelf like it never happened. Some things just aren't worth the time. It won't count for any reading goals- and I don't think it's fully fair for me to rate and review having not read it all.

Jenni Elyse
5: Favorite
4: Loved It
3: Liked It
2: It’s Okay
1: Hated It
-and-
Jen
★★★★★ Loved almost everything about it. Only a few, if any, minor limitations noted.
★★★★ Really liked it & it has at least a couple interesting qualities.
★★★ Liked it or may have a few interesting qualities.
★★ Disliked it, may have 1 redeeming quality (writing style, novelty, etc).
★ Hated it, & no redeeming additional qualities noted. Recommend avoiding it.
To me a 3-star book is perfectly acceptable - decent writing, interesting story and characters. I am always surprised to read that amazon or goodreads or authors consider that 3-stars is a "negative review."
A 2-star rating indicates that there are some flaws that I couldn't overlook
A 1-star book is one I really disliked and do not recommend, though others might feel differently
A 4-star book is one that I really liked - there is something exceptional about it, whether character development, writing style, or simply a plot that grabbed me and refused to let go.
A 5-star book is truly exceptional - it's the book that I will buttonhole total strangers and tell them "You have to read this!"

★★★★★: It was amazing! I would love to read this book again.
★★★★ 1/2: It was almost perfect. I still want to re-read it.
★★★★: The book had some excellent qualities, but I couldn't quite bring myself to love it. I might reread it.
★★★ 1/2: These books exceeded my expectations. I'm not sure I would re-read it, but I would still recommend it.
★★★: The average, likeable read. Enjoyable, but not necessarily memorable.
★★ 1/2: Almost, but not quite enjoyable. There was something about it that I couldn't bring myself to like.
★★: This story fell flat. Definitely Meh. Maybe someone else would like it.
★: Absolutely hated it. There are some serious problems with the story that I couldn't ignore.

That's kind of weird - especially with the natural bias towards the centre point on a 5 point scale, and when that point is labelled "Liked It" ... I guess authors would be disappointed with a 3 star though - they've invested so much in the book and would desperately hope that people adored it. And from a marketing perspective a solid 3 star probably doesn't suggest a book that's going to trend and sell well. Maybe that explains it.
Won't stop me giving 3 stars for books that I enjoyed reading!

5 Stars: I loved this It was capable of making me feel deep emotions and think. I will gush about it given half a chance. These are the books that I want to keep in my personal library without question.
4 Stars: I really liked this book. It is one I am pleased to have read, but I recognize its flaws. I will remember the details of this book. I may or may not want to own this book.
3.5 Stars: I liked this book. It is a book I would recommend to the right person, but I will not rave about it. I am unlikely to keep this book in my library.
3 Stars: I liked the book, but it was nothing special and will likely not recommend or remember much about it. I will not make space for it in my library unless part of a series I love.
2 Stars: I did not like this book and possibly did not finish it, but it has redeeming qualities. It will not be in my personal library.
1 Star: I hated this book. I will be very vocal in my disdain. May consider owning for the sole purpose of defacement and destruction

5 stars (rare from me): Loved it! Amazing! Couldn't put it down and/or couldn't wait to get back to it.
4 stars: really liked it. Very good
3.5 stars: good, I enjoyed it; if a series, I'm likely to pick up the next one
3 stars: it was ok. Nothing special. I may have skimmed parts that weren't as interesting to me; if a series, I probably wouldn't continue
2 stars (rare rating from me): Didn't like it. Bored
1 stars (not sure I've ever given this, but I have given 1.5): Hated it. Really bored.
Ok, I just added in those explanations now.
I mostly go on enjoyment and interest (did it keep my attention or was I bored or got distracted easily). I also try to keep the same scale regardless of type of book I'm reading.

If I just didn't like it, 2 stars.
3☆ is Its OK, nothing to write home about. Maybe it was a bit of empty fluff that I felt like reading and did like but. ... fluff.
4☆ Enjoyed it! Would likely recommend.
5☆ LOVED IT. If I REALLY loved it, then you'll see me pimping it out hard to everyone I know.
Like .... The Huntingfield Paintress. From a small publisher but easily a contender for Best of 2016. If it could get some visibility. .. or word of mouth viral action going.

"When I rate books I begin my rating based on how much I like the book. 2.5 stars means I feel ambivalent about it."
Th..."
Wow! That is a lot of criteria. I think having to keep track of all that when I read would just make me go crazy. To each their own, though.

"When I rate books I begin my rating based on how much I like the book. 2.5 stars means I feel ambivalent ab..."
It's admittedly a bit much. I don't really keep track of it while I read though. Honestly I'm a researcher for a living so I like spreadsheets and having systematic ways to evaluate things.
I will say that I find it helpful for writing up my blog reviews. These are all criteria I use as a guideline to writing up my blog reviews so it's not hard to keep it all straight. However, a book like Raven Boys is not one I'll typically review on the blog so in those cases, it usually more of a general impression rating rather than spend a lot of time thinking about all the criteria

★ Hated it, & no redeeming additional qualities noted. Recommend avoiding it. OR I hated it so much even if well crafted/written that nothing it might have in its favour could ever motivate me to bring it up a star.
★★ Disliked it, may have 1 redeeming quality (writing style, novelty, etc) OR I might have hated it overall but it had some overwhelmingly in its favour that made me decide to give it an extra star.
★★★ Liked it. May have some real problems even so, or may just not have liked it a lot. I have a few series I rate at 3 stars all the time, but still enjoy them from time to time, but I think the writing is fairly average or not special, but the writing style and so forth is much more enjoyable for others even if it's fairly straightforward or follows a predictable but comfortable pattern.
★★★★ Really liked it & it it has something special about it or it's quite good but not enough to give 5 stars. OR it could be rounded up or down on Goodreads, so is rather flexible as is 3.
★★★★★ Loved almost everything about it. IF it was 4.5 stars rounded up, then only a few, if any, minor limitations noted.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Huntingfield Paintress (other topics)Big Little Lies (other topics)
I find myself judging books on different scales. I think that's because I read different types of books with different goals. Some books I read purely for entertainment, the same reason I watch a 30 min sitcom. If I enjoyed the book, it gets a high rating.
What do you do? Am I being too easy on some genres and too hard on others?