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Publishing Gripes and Grrrs!
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Carole
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Dec 04, 2019 04:45AM

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I have been buying books as gifts for the holidays too. The Facebook ad share page is up and running. It is a public group so please invite your author friends! Here is the link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/23903...
I know an author who released a free short story last year right before Christmas when people are getting their new e-readers. He said he had some book sales in the weeks following from readers that liked his writing style. I don't think it was a ton, but every little bit helps.


I've always followed the advice that an author shouldn't comment on reviews left for her books, whether good or otherwise.
Please be careful. Some of the reviewers have flagged you to Goodreads, according to their comments.

Thank you for these reminders of opportunities Erica.

Some of the changes deal with formatting requirements, and if you don't get it exactly right, they reject automatically reject your story. They don't ask you to fix an otherwise good story's one formatting flaw; they just reject it, and then you can't resubmit.
Some of them deal with content and seem pretty straightforward, but yesterday I had a story rejected because it was considered a "blog-style" post. I didn't understand what they meant, so I sent in a request for clarification. The response was from someone who hadn't read the story, but they said, "We do not prefer blog style posts, where the author is only taking about their experience and not in some way providing advise to others."
Problem is, that's not what I sent them. I crafted a piece about a specific writing problem, gave clear advice on how to resolve it, and illustrated it with some of my own work. I think the latter point was what turned off the editor. It was written from the perspective of a problem I had and how I resolved it. But it clearly was "providing advice to others."
Beyond that, I've found recent stories on WC where the author did exactly the same thing, and that was apparently okay.
I find this pretty frustrating. Yeah, they're allowed to pick whichever stories they want, but inconsistency drives me up the wall, and I'm left with the feeling that they're using the rules to justify a rejection when an editor just didn't like it as much as another. Fine, reject my story if you don't like it, but don't point to some inapplicable rule as the reason.
Grrrr . . .

Also, Amazon does not sync information on different formats of the same book. How can I get them to fix this, once and for all.



People never look at one review. I know for me, when I read a negative review, I like to read the book and see if the reviewer was correct. Sometimes books with a slew of bad reviews do very well. Don't take it to heart.

Thank you. I really am open to criticism--it was something I learned. And I could probably do better than anyone roasting my own books. But I just think it should be FAIR criticism.
We all feel that way- and sometimes the reviewers criticize just to entertain their audience. They confuse constructive comments with mean-spirited attacks. When I review I don't always like what I'm reading, but I take into account that another reader might enjoy it. I try to point out what wasn't for me, in the same way, I point out what I loved about a book. As a reviewer, I am not there to rip someone apart, but inform people with similar tastes why they should or shouldn't pick up a book. Social media has given everybody a voice, which is a wonderful thing but failed to stress or teach the responsibility of someone's actions. If you are powerful enough to influence people, then you have to accept the responsibility and the possible consequences it might bring.
I think both my son and I have grown as writers by reading the reviews. We've discovered our audiences, who likes our style and where we should direct our advertising, and who doesn't appreciate what we do. When the cruel appraisals do appear, we never respond, but understand, this person was the wrong fit for our product.
I think both my son and I have grown as writers by reading the reviews. We've discovered our audiences, who likes our style and where we should direct our advertising, and who doesn't appreciate what we do. When the cruel appraisals do appear, we never respond, but understand, this person was the wrong fit for our product.
Books mentioned in this topic
One Stolen Kiss and Other Stories (other topics)One Stolen Kiss and Other Stories (other topics)