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To Unpublish or not to Unpublish....
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Leaving them up would mean that you still have those good reviews to your name, it would show that you've written many books (although that's less necessary given you have 6 other books), it shows your improvement as a writer, and leaves open the possibility of new readers finding and enjoying the books.
Taking them down would mean that (as you mentioned) you don't need to worry about a reader getting a bad first impression of your writing from them, and you don't have a book that's not selling well attached to your name (at least not on Amazon; I suppose Goodreads leaving the books up takes away this perk). Those are all the perks I can personally think of.
All that being said, I would probably either re-work the books and re-launch them, or I would just leave them up. As long as they aren't getting bad reviews, they aren't harming anything. Most readers will gravitate to your newer works anyway, then work their way through the backlist if they like your writing.

I suppose it would've been far more helpful if a few readers left bad reviews so I could understand exactly what they didn't like, but...it isn't their job to give us advice, only their opinions:) Thanks so much for your feedback. It is greatly appreciated!!! Have a great weekend!

Instead you have a handful of positive reader reactions. And while the abortive KU reads might seem concerning, I would equate it more to people "just browsing" at the library stacks or a magazine stand since KU fosters that caliber of flexibility without imposing added costs on the browser.
It's safe to say plenty of authors with a growing backlist have earlier works that don't perhaps reflect the writer they've evolved to. Some readers find attraction for those works instead of being deterred by them. They genuinely enjoy sampling how a writer has grown over their career.
I'd vote for keeping your backlist intact. Let them pull whatever weight they can muster. Perhaps some circumstance down the road will offer up a logical opportunity to "freshen" the older books, in whatever fashion you see best or appropriate. That might give you a chance to revisit a rework of substance.




I have unpublished a few short stories. I did it because they never sold and when I had them free a few copies would go out, followed by a poor review. I'd say if you've gotten some good reviews on your books and a few sales, why not keep them up?
I'm not a fan of writers rewriting and republishing what they've already published, especially since you had good reviews on them. Look at KU as someone browsing your books in a bookstore. Just because someone puts a book back on the shelf is no reason to think it's not good enough for someone else.
I'm not a fan of writers rewriting and republishing what they've already published, especially since you had good reviews on them. Look at KU as someone browsing your books in a bookstore. Just because someone puts a book back on the shelf is no reason to think it's not good enough for someone else.


I don't know if someone else has already said this but it is possible to do what you have done, i.e. make alterations and reupload to Amazon (not sure about anywhere else) and this can be good. Then change the cover - and rewrite the blurb. I'd be loathe to unpublish, especially as you don't have bad reviews.
I've changed a cover and rewritten blurbs several times for all my books.
It looks like you might need to add a bit of action or interest to the early chapters. Maybe all this can be done bit by bit so that it doesn't become too onerous. Then when done, you can reupload. In the meantime, just let them lie fallow.




Some people have enjoyed my book more than others. As an author, you're never going to please everybody.
I am in the middle of writing another book, so it will be interesting to see what people make of it when it comes out.
Last of all, congratulations on getting so many books published. I need to get a move on with mine ha ha


Since these two books received a few good reviews from readers, not friends, I'm going to keep them up. But I will definitely heed a bad review and take another look at them. Thanks all!

I will definitely take your advice about not rushing to get any of my books written and published.



I'm the same with my fanfiction, actually, which of course has no monetary worth at all. I leave the older works there for people to read, even though they're not anywhere near as good as my newer pieces, because that was the best I could do at the time, and I like that the progression of my writing shows in that way.
Just my two-penn'orth, since you asked :)

Don't give up on your work. Selling some is better than selling none. As someone else said, you can try making smaller changes, like rewriting the blurb or redesigning the cover. You can try advertising on different book sites than you have in the past to see if that shakes up some new sales.
Good luck.

There can be a multitude of reasons a 7 y o could not finish your book and they don't have to be due to dislike. You must realize that. I assume the one placing the review also didn't finish it. Reasons, as I'm sure you know, can be sentence structure, hard to understand idioms or similes, poor punctuation. The list could go on. There is so much that goes into a story that helps make it flow, making it a joy to read.
Since my other books are doing well, I hate to have a reader look at those two books and judge the others from those. I can easily unpublish them on Amazon, but GRs won't let you remove books once posted here.
Has anyone else decided to unpublish a book? Like I said, the few reviews I got (4 & 3) were great. I just don't know what would be best, leave them or unpublish them. Thanks so much for your thoughts. Gail