Terminalcoffee discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Feeling Nostalgic? The archives
>
Suitably Sunday and a Vote Whore/Code Violation WARNING


I'm surprised Jackie hasn't read Murakami, by the way.



But there's been so much competition and weirdness about asking for votes recently, that it bugs me now. There's a vibe of desperation to it, I guess.
It's just me, though, so do what you want to do.


They would, Stephen.

All I really want is analysis of the review, and so far, no one has done that. I don't give a who-ahh if someone likes or hates the book, how was the review written. That's what matters to me.


Jackie Librarian? I'm not mad for pete sake.
RA, it is homework. You assignment tonight is to review ten reviews of Twilight.
Folks, when I speak my mind I use the words of "speaking ones mind." When I'm mad I cuss.


Great, now I feel guilty. Ok I'm done with guilty. LOL

Personally speaking, I think the secret to the reviews is that there is no secret. When I first joined this site I tried to write straight-forward, New York Times sounding reviews. They sucked and I cringe whenever I stumble across one of those. The day of liberation came when I noticed that the words above the little textbox say "Your Review/What this book meant to you." Usually if the book has inspired something within you then the review is going to be pretty good no matter what. Those of mine that seem to have been the most well liked by friends are the ones that include some personal detail about my life as it relates to the book, but this too can become an annoying shtick if overused. So...uh...yeah, there's my two cents.

They've become more conversational, and I think they've gotten way better since I joined Goodreads in their readability, too.

But speaking of incredible reviews, have you read David's of the The Immigrants? It is pure art. At least in my estimation. http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Unless we aren't. Here, I mean.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
BUT what I really want from all of you is not how I got it wrong about Murakami, but how to write better reviews. So have at it. No ad hominem attacks or I'll "let loose the dogs of war"
So, I'll be at church, because that is my job after all, and I'll be back here to read my own vivisection. Be kind if you can, but if you can't, at least be fair.
Smooooooooooochie!