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Book Ratings and/or Additional Warning for Readers

I think as far as the warning you used, if the writing is good, they will understand that. I have read books by well-known writers where it is clear they are using the characters to rant. Boring, even if I agreed with some of them. I think the trick is to not paint your characters black-and-white. For example, if you're progressive, give your conservative characters some likable traits. See their point of view. And vise-versa. If you're religious and can't see the atheist point of view, then find an atheist and talk to them. Your character will hopefully reflect a layered person.
It's something I'm considering. Maybe genre affects this as well - I guess people are more likely to expect sexual scenes in romance (and obviously erotica) than anywhere else.
What I'll do for sure is to detailed mention of possibly offensive content on my website where I list the work-in-progress books. By "detailed mention" I mean something like a list of this kind:
15+ recommended
cursing: minimal
nudity/sexual content: a few explicit scenes
drug use: none
(how it'll actually look is what I'll decide over time)
Since I'm writing fantasy, I think it's obvious to be pure fiction.
What I'll do for sure is to detailed mention of possibly offensive content on my website where I list the work-in-progress books. By "detailed mention" I mean something like a list of this kind:
15+ recommended
cursing: minimal
nudity/sexual content: a few explicit scenes
drug use: none
(how it'll actually look is what I'll decide over time)
Since I'm writing fantasy, I think it's obvious to be pure fiction.





Sounds as if the readers simply didn't agree with the point-of-view of a 3,000-year-old, fictional Vampire, in which case, I wouldn't bother with the warning. Vampire fiction tends to be sexual, so if the reader wanted to skip over that part, they could have. I, personally, don't see a need for a warning except possibly grouping this as Adult Fiction. There needs to be some responsibility on the part of the reader. If I pick up a book and it goes somewhere I don't want to follow, I put it down. I don't blame the writer. (Now, if your cover looked like a cozy, that might be misleading.) :)

Indeed. I'm basically writing in the Urban Fantasy genre, but the genre is quite swamped with paranormal romance - especially the vampire sub-genre...
For the last year or so, I've been working to shift my books to related genres like Dark Fantasy that don't attract PNR.
I concerned about picking up readers that expect romance based on the genre and get something else entirely.

"**Please note, as mentioned in a review, there is flagrantly foul language in these novels. The main character does not have a problem with cussing, just uninspired cussing."


I just put 'PG18' on the cover.
Leah wrote: "Do any of you include your book rating or warnings to readers as part of your book description?"
I have, but I don't any longer. I don't like doing it. For one, it's tough to do without giving spoilers. For another, I write for adults and I assume most adults can handle most anything and if they can't, they don't have to keep reading.
I love books that are boldly written and authors who don't apologize for writing that way.
Also, with some of my work if I started giving warnings of what might offend someone, I wouldn't know where to stop.
I think a lot of this extends from my teenage years when the PMRC was discussing putting warning labels on records, which always seemed so weak and stupid to me. The only good thing that came of it was Frank Zappa, Dee Snyder, and John Denver forming a weird alliance against the same cause.
I have, but I don't any longer. I don't like doing it. For one, it's tough to do without giving spoilers. For another, I write for adults and I assume most adults can handle most anything and if they can't, they don't have to keep reading.
I love books that are boldly written and authors who don't apologize for writing that way.
Also, with some of my work if I started giving warnings of what might offend someone, I wouldn't know where to stop.
I think a lot of this extends from my teenage years when the PMRC was discussing putting warning labels on records, which always seemed so weak and stupid to me. The only good thing that came of it was Frank Zappa, Dee Snyder, and John Denver forming a weird alliance against the same cause.





PARENTAL ADVISORY:
The main character in this book experiences some intense
and adult situations, including graphic violence, attempted rape, sex between consenting adults, torture, and child abuse.
Also, a dog gets hurt (not intentionally, though).
It may not be suitable for all readers.


DISCLAIMER
The author wishes to make it clear that she does not condone racism, homophobia or any of the other deplorable and controversial behaviours and attitudes described in this story. These are character traits and do not reflect the views of the author.


Certain subject matter probably does warrant a content warning. Examples would be suicide, rape, torture, child abuse, and domestic violence. Those are topics which can be potentially very upsetting, especially for people who have experienced them firsthand. I don't think readers really *need *to be warned about profanity or sex, even explicit sex, unless those things would be really out of place in that genre. That said, by placing a content warning, you're letting the reader decide, which I think is the right way to handle it.

I also think that the warning might make the book more appealing to those readers who are looking for heavy hitting, realistic content that doesn't pull punches. Sort of like how the Parental Advisory stickers on rap CD's made them more desirable to their core audience.
It is all about finding the right audience for your work and keeping those who don't appreciate that from wasting their time on it, and potentially giving you a poor review because they were a bad fit.
As a side note, as a former law enforcement officer at a detention facility who was tasked with keeping inappropriate books from 13-16 year-olds, I would have loved having something like my Parental Advisory on the title page, so I didn't have to skim through everything folks brought for the kids during visits.


Indeed! I have always disliked Jane Austen's works and fail to see why she is so appreciated. Currently reading this year's Mann Booker prizewinner, Milkman. How on Earth did it win?

Don't recall any warnings on the cover of Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar

Ditto.
Although after reading through this thread I'm tempted to add the following to all my books:
CONTENT WARNING: This book contains stuff. If any of it offends you, that's your problem, not mine. Let's be adult about it and move on with our lives, yeah? Or, give me a 1-star review if that makes you feel better. That would be fine.
Well ... OK, I won't do that.
After reading a 1-star review of someone else's book that essentially said "I loved this book but it has the F word in it and takes the name of my Lord in vain, so I'm giving it only one star," I started a story that dropped the F-bomb in the first sentence. That way if anyone complained of something similar I could just go, "Hey, I dropped the F-bomb in the first sentence which you would have known about if you had bothered reading the Look Inside sample. That's what you get when you're not paying attention."
But I get so few reviews I've never gotten a 1-star. Oh well, that's the price of obscurity!
Micah wrote: "Although after reading through this thread I'm tempted to add the following to all my books:
CONTENT WARNING: This book contains stuff. If any of it offends you, that's your problem, not mine. Let's be adult about it and move on with our lives, yeah? Or, give me a 1-star review if that makes you feel better. That would be fine."
I very nearly put a satirical warning on my second novel. It's got about everything you'd expect to upset people: swearing, sexual abuse, child abuse, violence, etc. I don't seem to have a copy of that satirical warning anymore, but it ran something like, "This book contains many teenagers working in the hot sun, making them smell terrible. It contains scenes of people wasting food. Some of the characters utter impolite things like, 'shut up' and 'you're so dumb'..." and so on. If the book were meant more as a comedy, I might have gone with it, but it's meant to be more of a tragedy.
I hear ya on the "Look Inside" thing. You can get a pretty good idea of the tone of a book in the first few pages.
This has been an interesting conversation and I am wondering what divides us, making us feel the need to add a warning, or feel that it's absolutely not necessary. For me, it could be partly due to my age and the fact that I've been reading "adult" books since I was pretty young and I don't recall any of those books having warnings of any kind in them.
Which reminds me of a slightly amusing story. My parents were overly protective of me as a child and I was not allowed to watch certain shows or movies. I could read pretty much anything I wanted, however, except one book. My dad caught me with his copy of The Godfather and told me "not until you're older". I was probably thirteen or fourteen at the time. He didn't leave it at that, though. He said, "There's a scene in there where a man cuts the head off a horse and puts it in another man's bed. Do you think you should be reading something like that?" And then he proceeded to read me the passage he was referring to. A few weeks later, I snuck the book back off his shelf. As it was now forbidden territory, I couldn't wait to explore it.
CONTENT WARNING: This book contains stuff. If any of it offends you, that's your problem, not mine. Let's be adult about it and move on with our lives, yeah? Or, give me a 1-star review if that makes you feel better. That would be fine."
I very nearly put a satirical warning on my second novel. It's got about everything you'd expect to upset people: swearing, sexual abuse, child abuse, violence, etc. I don't seem to have a copy of that satirical warning anymore, but it ran something like, "This book contains many teenagers working in the hot sun, making them smell terrible. It contains scenes of people wasting food. Some of the characters utter impolite things like, 'shut up' and 'you're so dumb'..." and so on. If the book were meant more as a comedy, I might have gone with it, but it's meant to be more of a tragedy.
I hear ya on the "Look Inside" thing. You can get a pretty good idea of the tone of a book in the first few pages.
This has been an interesting conversation and I am wondering what divides us, making us feel the need to add a warning, or feel that it's absolutely not necessary. For me, it could be partly due to my age and the fact that I've been reading "adult" books since I was pretty young and I don't recall any of those books having warnings of any kind in them.
Which reminds me of a slightly amusing story. My parents were overly protective of me as a child and I was not allowed to watch certain shows or movies. I could read pretty much anything I wanted, however, except one book. My dad caught me with his copy of The Godfather and told me "not until you're older". I was probably thirteen or fourteen at the time. He didn't leave it at that, though. He said, "There's a scene in there where a man cuts the head off a horse and puts it in another man's bed. Do you think you should be reading something like that?" And then he proceeded to read me the passage he was referring to. A few weeks later, I snuck the book back off his shelf. As it was now forbidden territory, I couldn't wait to explore it.

I started reading Kurt Vonnegut at age 13, including Breakfast of Champions with its comically simplistic but not very PG drawings. I'm sure if my parents had seen what was in it they would have taken it away from me, but the only harm Vonnegut ever did to me was to give me an appreciation of satire and unapologetically frank discourse on how absurd the adult world really is.
There's never been anything I've read that hurt me, no matter how many bad words or how much gratuitous violence or sex were in them. I, too, was "overly" protected as a child as far as what movies and TV I was allowed to watch. However, I know why my parents did that and it wasn't to protect me from harmful influences. It was because my mother believed that children grow up too quickly "these days" (we're talking the late 50s on through the mid-70s) and she wanted us to have the chance to be kids and have innocent fun before the world caught up to us.
I think I even understood that back then, and appreciated it. Being a kid was a dream. All the adult stuff would come when it came, but I'm glad she allowed us to live that dream as long as she did. So the coddling wasn't to save us from bad influences, but rather to save us for a while from the stress and worry that not being a kid carries with it.
On the whole, though, I think a lot of people today underestimate the ability of kids to process and understand what they see/read in fiction. I mean, look at The Hobbit. Definitely a book written for a younger audience, yet he deals with a lot of very serious and disturbing things ... including talks of torture and devices of war (the goblin section). Fiction written for younger audiences should, I think, be a place to safely discuss some of the horrible things life will throw at you. Or at least I feel that doing so causes no harm.



Leah wrote: "In the end, I guess it’s a matter of preference. "
It is. It's one of those things where there's no right way or wrong way and I'm guessing is largely determined by the genre you write and the kinds of books you prefer.
It is. It's one of those things where there's no right way or wrong way and I'm guessing is largely determined by the genre you write and the kinds of books you prefer.

I put a the simplistic warning there so the overly sensitive put it back and move on to the next book. I honestly don't give a hoot what they think of the 'offensive' way I have characterized some people or the language or situations. The warning (Which Dwayne and Micah agree we shouldn't need) is my concession to the %%%%% who can't see the forest for the trees.


This thread is an eye-opener to me. My series is about two sisters who are sexual abuse survivors and their journey out of that horrible lifestyle. In the first book, the older sister kills their father, the abuser. I have never seen the need to include a warning, neither have I received any negative reviews about the content. But as someone said, I don't have that many reviews anyway.



The blurb doesn't say anything about sexual abuse. In fact, the focus of the book is the psychological effects of the abuse, primarily difficulty forming relationships, so it's not in the blurb. However, my tagline is similar to L.K's: a young woman's turbulent journey out of childhood abuse.
I’m thinking about adding an R rating to my description, because a few readers have been insulted by the explicit but non-graphic sexual material.
I’m also thinking about including the additional message below, as some readers are offended by the beliefs of some of the vampires in the story.
“Note: Though some of the characters and scenes are based on real people and events, this is still a fictional vampire story. Any religious or political beliefs of the characters are a product of the fictional story.”
What do you guys feel about this method?