UK Amazon Kindle Forum discussion
Agony Aunt
>
Amazon refuse to remove spiteful review
message 101:
by
Elizabeth
(new)
May 07, 2012 02:59AM

reply
|
flag


On Amazon products I read the one star reviews that usually consist of people who didn't read the product description, complain about delivery or think it is a different colour of orange to what they thought it would be. The 5 star reviews have me heading for my payment details....

Like most writers, I would love to build a fan-base and in a very small way I am achieving that - whatever I write, a few people will want to read it. If they then review it, I'm thrilled. But I see from Shaun's post it could look dodgy!



To be brutally honest Simon, if I ever encountered an author who was so arrogant and condescending as to give the impression that they think people are too stupid to appreciate their book, I'd certainly not waste my time on it.


I also now look at the review to see if it is an Amazon verified purchase as we know that reviews can be posted from anyone, not necessarily a reader of the work. Free books downloaded count as verified purchases as well.
PS Where's the porn - there wasn't any in my copy ;0)

I didn't think about joint accounts that's a good point.



I wonder if daisyduck has considered that in the prenupts.

Actually from my review on 'Room' I feel quite strongly on this. Readers can pick up on bad grammar and spelling yet not be great themselves, but for the most case they are only readers so it doesn't matter. It's an attitude like this from others that puts a lot of people off reviewing I think. It might seem hypocritical but they don't have to be correct but an author does.
Lindsay - I review the same way. I list bad and good points (generally in a numbered list because hell I am not a writer and it's the way that works for me) and sum it up at the end.
I don't think anyone will be surprised to find out I don't have issues with confidence.
If I read your book, I don't care if you are my best friend, a prize winner or my annoying neighbour I will give you a rating that reflects my true opinion on your book and if I hated it, it will get a 1 star. I don't frankly care about hurting the authors feeling if I truly did not like the book. Not to say I won't try to find something positive and I won't do it in a mean way but I'm not going to not review it because I might discourage someone else. I'm not reviewing it for them, I'm doing it for me.
I have also given low ratings to books for the purpose that they might of 'went over my head' but if you write a damn pretentious book that only the educated will understand, it's your own fault.


Just spent about 5minutes editing that flipping comment above. Clearly the weather is making me loose more brain cells than normal.

Just spent about 5minutes editing that flipping comment above. Clearly the weather is making me loose more brain cells than normal."
You can't beat a good Bank Holiday rant! And that was a great one!!!


I just feel that some reviewers are in the mindset that certain books need to be given high ratings because of things that have nothing to do with the enjoyment of reading it. It could be one of the best written books on earth (good grammar, i haz it) and if it sucked, I'd still give it a bad rating.



I do agree Tom. In these modern days of quick wins etc it's easy to forget that the life of a book is long indeed. Only this morning I wrote a review for Frankenstein - and that was written almost 200 years ago. Certainly pays to have some perspective!

I hated it / I didn't like it / It's ok etc, is pretty objective, as subjective measures go.

Lol ! I can't make it between 1 and 5 Stu, I struggle doing surveys because I can't mark something out of ten. I like or I don't. There's no in-between really. The only difference I make is that the 4 will be enjoyable while the 5 will have that little bit extra that made me think, laugh, cry, coo or whatever else.
On another note, I don't think every single book is made for me to read. If I don't like a book, there is a strong element of personal taste involved. I cannot inflict a bad review on something that I thought would be a book for me but found out it wasn't. If I give up because I don't like a book, it's not the writer's fault. I don't think when a writer sets to write they have in mind that the book must please "me" or must be written in a way that must comply with "my" educational level. If I happen to choose the wrong book, then I think I am responsible for it, and don't think it's fair that the writer should be told "I picked up your book because I thought I liked vampires and in the end I decided I didn't like them so I'll give you a 1 star because your book is crap".
NB I am not taking anything into account other than whether I like a story or not, as you all know as per previous message, I don't think about anything other than how the book made me feel when I do my reviews. Maybe that's why in my case I can't leave bad reviews. If a writer read a bad review from me they'd probably think "Oh well can't please everyone" so there's no point in driving the average down is there?


RE: Your last point. If I didn't like a book and didn't review it and everyone like me didn't review it then it would have a high average yes? But does it really deserve it if half the people didn't like it but just didn't bother rating it?
Edit to add: Reviews are meant to be personal to your taste in my opinion. It's definitely not my fault that I picked a book I didn't like nor is it the writers fault for writing a book for a different target audience than me but if I give it a bad review it's not a personal attack, it's just my opinion on a book.

It does annoy me when people buy books and then moan about things that were apparent from the blurb and sometimes even the title of the book.

If they buy a book that is about vampires and is warned to contain adult scenes, then complain it's not good for their children or contains violence then kindly shut up -.-


Not sure if it's been debated on this thread yet, but I think there is a little confusion between a 'review' and an 'opinion'. For me, a review is something that looks at a book from a critical standpoint - structure, vocabularly, plot, characterisation, etc. An opinion is, well, something like 'I loved it' or something like that.
Since AWM has been released, it seems to me the vast majority of Amazon or Goodreads reviews are 'opinions' rather than 'reviews'. And everyone is entitled to an opinion, whether it is contrary to what the author's 'opinion' of their own work is or not.
Once you write something and put it out for all the world to see, quite frankly, you open up a whole world of trouble if you haven't got a thick skin.
As for 'reviews', I see those as coming from specialist review sites or from websites on which reviews are the main focus.
Just an opinion . . . obviously . . . ;)

The term 'review' is a misnomer for our purposes. I quite agree.

I shall from now on put a disclaimer saying I am sharing my opinion and not writing a review.

Yes, ML, you'll find that most of us want to give back to 'our' authors in our small way by being supportive in return for the hours of enjoyment we receive from them.
The group has just sort of evolved that way. Certainly wasn't intentional.

Not sure if it's been debated on this thread yet, but I think there is a little confusion between a 'review' and an 'opini..."
That is very well put Ian and I totally agree. I would not be comfortable giving a 'review' of a book as such (am so not qualified for that job) but am definitely comfortable giving my opinion of one!!
I've just come across something which really annoys me. We all know that we don't enjoy the same things - but if you haven't enjoyed a book and others have, don't accuse those reviewers of being an inside job!
I follow Linda Gillard on facebook and she posted about this. Someone has writen a two star reveiew and accused the 37 five star and 16 four star reviews of being an inside job!
http://www.amazon.co.uk/HOUSE-OF-SILE...
I follow Linda Gillard on facebook and she posted about this. Someone has writen a two star reveiew and accused the 37 five star and 16 four star reviews of being an inside job!
http://www.amazon.co.uk/HOUSE-OF-SILE...

Imagine being so arrogant that you can't conceive of anyone disagreeing with you unless it's a conspiracy!

(Although oddly, I actually agree with one of the criticisms - there were quite a lot of similar characters, and the nicknames REALLY didn't help.)

Wow, that's some friends and family she's got. The first one even went to the trouble of doing 257 other reviews so that she wouldn't be found out!
Katie wrote: "Wow, that's some friends and family she's got. The first one even went to the trouble of doing 257 other reviews so that she wouldn't be found out! "
Ha ha! That made me laugh. I think that first reviewer even joined amazon vine to cover their tracks...
;0)
Ha ha! That made me laugh. I think that first reviewer even joined amazon vine to cover their tracks...
;0)


Where do I sign up? I want free stuff.
Simon (Highwayman) wrote: "They interviewed an amazon spoof reviewer on radio.4 today. Apparently they do it because they get offered free things. They implied that amazon didn't care. Which I suppose all evidence suggests i..."
That sounds like amazon vine - but they are supposed to be genuine reviews. Damaskat was explaining how it works on the zoo a few weeks ago. I don't think you can apply - you get invited but I don't know how they select who to ask.
:0)
That sounds like amazon vine - but they are supposed to be genuine reviews. Damaskat was explaining how it works on the zoo a few weeks ago. I don't think you can apply - you get invited but I don't know how they select who to ask.
:0)
Books mentioned in this topic
One Day (other topics)London, the Doggy and Me (other topics)