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Is Review Direct worth a second look?
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Bard - I'm not keen on paying for a Big Mac, much less a potentially damaging professional review. But I fear the consequence of not getting that review will be my insolvency at the drive-up window.
Rosemary - I agree with you up to "Otherwise". The point is to gain name recognition, affordable at the indie level only when markets and marketeers give you widespread, free public exposure. They are unlikely to oblige us unless our work has already met with approval from a reputable source (such as Kirkus). Otherwise, their editors are risking their time on an unknown quantity.
My own collection of reviews is thin and gives the impression of me as a mediocre writer. I have given away hundreds of free titles in the hope of seeing the Review Response Ratio rise above 0.8%, but instead all I receive in return is a continuing object lesson in man's inhumanity. If there is a God, I pray that He smite 99.2% of my readers.
OK. I know that's not fair. I'll refactor that prayer to excuse the blind, infirm, insane, slow readers, recent immigrants, and victims of Spastic Mouse Finger Syndrome. That leaves 98.6%, a number that just so happens to be the normal body temp if you take out the percent sign and insert the "degrees" character. A coincidence? Ha! I laugh the Haughty Laugh at such a notion.
I hope this clears things up.
Jon Etheredge


http://hampton-networks.com/indie-rev...

Does this brigand have a name?




From my WeBook experience I'm not in hopes for any sort of review that I have to chase. I had thought of doing the give-away books for reviews, but that would be paying for them. I have a slush pile myself of writing friends from Twitter. I can't keep up with that much less the extras, so why should I expect the same out of a fellow writer with the same insane time schedule I have?
Not that this isn't a great idea. I'd love it. there are websites that supposedly cater to this need, but they are atrocious because of the amount of spam and badgering that one receives.
I'm with Marie-Anne in thinking that all those downloads are only sitting on someone's Kindle or Nook waiting for an "Oh yeah" moment. IF they read it I'd say about 15% of those who do will post a review, but what the percentage of readers to downloaders are? Who knows?
I'm at the point of trying to budget in the editing process, so paying for reviews is at the bottom of my list....

I believe the fault lies with slow readers who feel the need to finish book #11 in the "Unicorn Undead" series before switching plot lines. How long does it take to read a book, dammit?
I wonder whether freebies are the problem. Given two books -- one free and one you bought for 2.99 -- you're going to read the one you had to pay for first. That way you're protected in case you sit on your Kindle by accident. There's a long latin name for this psychological effect, but my wife just calls it C.A.S.H. (Cheap Ass Stupid Husband).
I can sympathize with the high cost of editing. My solution last time was to host live reads of the manuscript. Two friends come over, we have spaghetti, ten minutes of timed gossip, then the manuscripts and red pens come out and the editor(s) start reading out loud. Fifty pages can be covered in 1-2 hours, and when it's finished, I pay the reader $.50 a page.
The only time this has caused problems was when we were reading a ghost book I wrote. One of the side characters was revealed to be a ghost herself, and her true identity was hidden. My reader had an epiphany she had to share, so she blurted out her theory about the ghost's true identity. I told her she was wrong and showed her the clues I'd written. She got mad and stomped out of the room, telling me I didn't know what I was talking about.


yes, patience is really key according to other authors I've spoken with...

Will this strategy bear fruit? How 'bout Fruit Loops?

I like it--especially the person who went out and bought the book--reverse psychology?


yes, that would make my day too!


Ken, no reviews? Does that mean we finally get to judge a book by its cover?


What I heard..."Blah blah blah woman blah blah Oprah."
I like reading stuff that made it into all three major media -- traditional print, Cliff Notes and Classic Comics.





@Viginia, right back at you. Low star books are not always a low star to everyone. Once other people realize this, they will extend their reading horizons. I quite enjoy saving the day.


I only see one path before me -- concentrate on making it the best book I have ever produced and drink 360 bottles of Amber Bock.

Seriously, $425 is a LOT of money! You could read for a year on that money (if you have an ereader.) You could buy every book on writing you wanted. (My hands-down favorite: "Writing Fiction" by Janet Burroway.) You could take a writing course or learn to tango or fly to Brazil---halfway there, anyway. You could buy a minor politician. You could write your own review and pay yourself. The possibilities are endless.

I'm probably going to spend a large fraction of it on you.

Essentially, advertising a one-trick pony does make it's one trick more valuable.
This..."
I've heard this. Unfortunately, if your first book doesn't sell well, your publisher may be less interested in picking up the second...of course, this leaves you the option of self-pubbing the follow-ups.

Essentially, advertising a one-trick pony does make it's one trick more va..."
Or you can go to the middle ground, a good small pub. So you'll have some editorial overview, and cover help even though you'll probably be doing most of your own promo work. I agree on the "keep writing good books" formula.

Essentially, advertising a one-trick pony does not make it's one trick more valuable.
..."
Thanks for making this point, Michel. It resonated with me, since I have my first novel out. I'm starting the second one today!


Jon, loved this response.

Essentially, advertising a one-trick pony does not make it's one trick more valuable.
..."
This is exactly correct. Spend your money on an editor and graphic designer.

1) Write a good book
2) Pay an editor. Shop around. I seriously got mine done for less than $200. She wasn't the best and I had to work harder to make it work, but she caught stuff I did not see.
3) Hire a cover artist. This matters...big time.
4) Get the blurb right. Use your writer friends for input and look at the best-selling books and look at their blurbs. It matters.
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jon Etheredge (other topics)Jon Etheredge (other topics)
Has anybody ever used these people?
Jon Etheredge