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Weird Reasons For A Bad Review
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Leigh, side note, I had an author whose book I couldn't read, so I sent her a private message instead. She bitched at me for not posting a review with, it's not my kind of book, but it might be yours. I refused.
lol some of these are hilarious. I've seen a few odd reviews, one where the girl was so into the book and it didn't go as she envisioned so she wrote a review on how she saw the book playing out.





Casey wrote: "I got a 2-star review once from someone who actually liked the book but felt it left too many unanswered questions. Then she gave a list of those questions, which... hold on... will be answered in ..."
Nothing like knowing there is a sequel and still giving it a bad review because there are so many unanswered questions. I have seen a few reviews like that, 2*, and you feel like asking them the ultimate question..uhh you do realize there's a sequel right?
Nothing like knowing there is a sequel and still giving it a bad review because there are so many unanswered questions. I have seen a few reviews like that, 2*, and you feel like asking them the ultimate question..uhh you do realize there's a sequel right?


I've noticed that no one uses the word serial, just series. If at least one story isn't neatly wrapped up within a single book, it is a serial. If the stories are connected, within the same universe, have an ongoing story arc in the background, but have closure for that particular book, it is a series.
Still, not a reason to give a bad review. Even if they aren't using the right term, there is usually an indication that a book is part of a larger whole.


The first Matrix was awesome. It didn't answer every single question. It even teased bigger things to come at the end. However, it had a quantifiable ending that closed the main plot. Is Neo the one? Yes.
The second one had awesome parts, and even better graphics. However, it confused the "to be continued" with an ending. It isnt. Furthermore, the main plot conflict wasn't resolved.
I think a lot of authors, and indies are the most guilty, confuse the "to be continued" with an acceptable ending to a book. They say "well there will be a next one, so you don't have to be done yet."
I think the trick comes from being a writer who can present a lesser plot as the main conflict of a single installment, while maybe hiding the true conflict as a subplot that slowly burns through each book in the series. You the. have to make your "main conflict" ring true, while not just seeming like a speed bump.
There in lies the problem, and I don't know if this free flowing tangent makes any sense. Authors who immediately make the main conflict the top plot point for each book, and solve it only with a "to be continued" aren't doing their job.
That's the way I see it, anyway.

I agree with everything, btw.

The reviewer stated that they knew they wouldn't enjoy the book but "read it anyway just to reaffirm their contempt for the author." lol. Not the strangest, but some seriously strong feelings for someone who they'd probably never met.

Or when there's a massive warning at the beginning of a book, and the reviwes says nothing but bitter complaints about the subject matters that was already given in the warning. Yet another reaon warnings are useless.

Perfectly acceptable for me, though: I have to actually read the book to realise "it's not my kind of book." If I don't, then people tell me "you have no right to talk about it: you haven't read it." Damned if you do, damned if you don't...


Depends on how bad the writing was based on wht they did read lol

That one I can accept, too: if I can't finish a book, it doesn't just happen, it's for a reason... or several. Too many grammar/spelling mistakes, plot holes, and so on. For me, those can justify a negative review (odds are that if the first chapters weren't properly edited, the last ones won't be better).



Damn. Good point lol




Sidenote: I also can't stand when people have shelves in their "My books" tab that are "books I'll never read" or "F*** that author" and then fill up those shelves with hundreds of books. What is the purpose of that? Why waste shelve and book space? Just so people will know which books that person hates even though they never read them? It just makes that person look like an idiot. I'll never understand it.


1 star review starting with the statement the book is utterly predictable, followed by a very long list of plot points showing how it's predictable because it allowed the reviewer to make a bullet list.
"The book didn't go how I wanted it to go and therefore that's why I didn't enjoy it"
something along those lines were written on a review I once came across and I was just like, is this person serious right now?
something along those lines were written on a review I once came across and I was just like, is this person serious right now?
So what's the strangest reason you've ever seen given for a bad review?