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Would You Rather Have NO Reviews Or BAD reviews?
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Angela
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Jul 14, 2014 05:51PM

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I'd rather have no reviews than all bad reviews, but I'm okay with a few bad ones mixed in with good ones.




That is a great attitude!

Of course, the problem is that none of us want to think our books deserve bad reviews, even if everyone else does!

However, if a scathing review is obviously based upon the reader's disapproval of the narrative, merely because it may not align exactly with his or her personal religious, social, or philosophical beliefs, and prejudices, then I discard it as not worth fretting over.
Intelligent, discerning readers will see right through a biased review and ignore it.


Why would you wait for readers to determine if your book is good or bad? Shouldn't you have it reviewed and critiqued *before* you make it available?
If someone buys your book and hates it, they're not going to buy another one from you. (Now, if they hate the genre or subject matter, that's different.)
I wouldn't make a book available unless I *knew* it was good. Granted, I'm not going to please everyone, but I know my reviews will have five stars mixed with the twos.

As Abigail mentioned the book should have been critiqued for spelling errors, grammar, etc. long in advance of publishing so we should get mixed reviews based on interest.
I think we need both good and bad.

I'd like to presume these would be bad reviews balanced by good ones (like Abigail above, I don't think I'd make a book available unless I felt it was a pretty solid item), so any potential reader could look at both sets and get a good picture of what's in store for them. I know I always appreciate reading the good and the bad and seeing what makes the difference for people.
If there were only bad reviews (horrible thought!) then that is useful too, though it would be pretty crushing.

Why would you wait for readers to determine if your book is good or bad? Shouldn't you have it reviewed and critiqued *before* you make it available?
If someone buys you..."
Abigail,
No author intentionally releases a bad book - intentionally being the key word.
No publisher's acquisition team would accept a manuscript unless it was judged to have commercial potential and no publisher will release a book for distribution until satisfied that the end result of the combined efforts of the layout editor, conceptual editor, and author had produced a viable product.
I was absolutely certain that my completed, polished manuscript was worthy of publication just as it was, until two months working with one of the publisher's conceptual editors taught me that it was not yet truly complete nor polished by commerical standards.
An author' opinion of their own completed, polished work is inherently biased. An outsider's opinion is essential to evaluating a completely unprejudiced view.


I would rather have no reviews, than all bad reviews. No reviews means that no one was affected one way or the other, while bad reviews means the person was negatively affected to the extent of spending time writing a review.
Everyone gets a mix of reviews. Even great literature gets bad reviews. There are a lot of idiots in the world, and no matter if you win the Nobel Prize, such people are going to give a bad review.
I disagree that reviews contain any useful information or criticism. If you were to write based on reviews, you would soon end up with a piece of crap. You have to write the story you have to tell. Forget what anyone says about it. (assuming that it's written with skill, you've mastered the craft, and know how to structure a story. Most self-published authors don't know how to do any of that)

Apart from this infamous example, of course...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_...

Apart from this infamous example, of course...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_..."
Steph,
Thank you for sharing the article. I was not aware of this hoax that uncoverd the greater hoax - the vanity press masquerading as a traditional publisher.
By the way, I accessed your profile. Loved the picture; regrettably, too few women wear hats today.
Jim