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If a friend of mine, or some other source whose opinion I respected, told me that, (and it was a big name author that I LIKE, lol), it would probably make me curious, though possibly still more critical if I was comparing the two authors mentally as I read.

HOWEVER, if I read a comparison like that in a review on say GR or Amazon or a blog (one not affiliated with either the author or publishing house) then it would pique my interest. Unless I hate the author it's being compared too lol

To me, it's also a turn-off when an author states that their writing is "Evanovich meets Christie" or "King meets Grisham" or something similar. I'd rather that author just be themselves. Catch me with your writing, you know?





Yet, as a reader, I don't want one author to be like another.




As an author, I don't do it often myself or at least only if I think it will help people. In other people's reviews, my stuff has been compared to just about anyone, who's anyone in my field! Phnark. I'm hoping that's a good thing.
Cheers
MTM



Yes, I'm interested in the story/plot, but the writing counts a lot and so do the characters. Some female authors create female protagonists that annoy me, wimpy, gotta get someone else to save them. Others write assertive female protagonists (like Lisa Gardner and Tess Gerritson). Similarly, I rarely read books written in first POV because most authors cannot sustain an interesting and likeable character for the length of a book. Nelson DeMille is, of course, an exception.


I know that it's of the best intentions, but they're really not doing the authors any favour. They've basically condemned the book before it's pages has actually been opened.

This book was compared to Tolstoy, something about the Australian novel he never wrote. I read it, but apart from having lots of characters and being tragic I couldn't see any real comparison. But I did enjoy it.
Another review said it was in the style of John Irving, but I couldn't see that at all. The style is very different.
If I had to make a comparison I'd say it's an Australian Forsyte Saga, but more modern.

Yes, I would try that book out, but will read the sample before buying it.
Some themes are very similar. For instance a brilliant novel by Barbara Wood was written years before the DAVinci Code and is a lot better. The theme is very similar, but Barbara Wood handles it with more subtly and character development than Dan Brown.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/04...

As I bought it over a decade ago now, I'm almost tempted to try and trade it in, but I've never actually read much Stephen King - I much prefer Neil Gaiman.
Generally this sort of comparison makes me cringe. All those dreadful Tolkien rip-off fantasy novels which have the nerve to market themselves as "in the Tolkien mould" or whatever.
"Pratchettesque" is another faux-adjective that gets my back up. Every geeky teenager and their pet dog was churning out faintly sarcastic prose in the mid-90s and fondly imagining they were successfully replicating the style of Terry Pratchett. The actual results were a bit embarrassing.
Many writers have clear influences on their work, and there's nothing wrong with that. I've mentioned that I'm inspired by The League of Gentlemen, Paul Magrs, Doctor Who, Terry Pratchett (hey, even Tolkien) on various forums, but I'd never claim those influences are literally visible in my book, you know? I'd kind of hope they're not, to be honest.

If it's in a description, or a promotion, then I probably won't care much about it.
Note, I'm not specifically saying being compared to those two big names. I'm saying in general. Could be Koontz, Coontz, Johansen, Grisham, Robb, Evanovich, etc.