I bought a book today by an author previously unknown to me. At six bucks plus, it was the most expensive ebook I’ve purchased in a long time. (Usually my ebook purchases are from indies, not trad publishers.) I bought this ebook because of one of its reviews. I did not buy because the review raved. The book caught my attention because the review’s tone was so damnably condescending, I had to make the purchase. This wasn’t a case of pitying the author. There were good reviews, too. Also, it helped that I suspected this was a book I would enjoy. It sounded smart and sure and people who liked it said it elevated and challenged its genre.
Whatever the book’s merits will be, the key component for the purchase was that the reviewer was too much of a jerk. What is it about bad reviews that so often reveal more about the reviewer than the book being reviewed? I emailed the author to tell him I bought his book. It sounded interesting and I wished him success with it. I look forward to reading it, but what can the rest of us take from this?
Take this post as a small salve to authors’ bruised egos.
People will love your work and others will hate it, but I want you to know that readers are generally intelligent people. They often see through the reviewer’s veil more than you might think. Readers divine intent when they read over-the-top malice and subtract value from a nasty review. Yea or nay, readers like thoughtful reviews. They get it when a reviewer sounds disrespectful or less than literate. Good readers (people who buy a lot of books!) aren’t easily impressed by cheap shots and snarky remarks. When a review is especially egregious, you might even get a sale out of it.
I’m not saying bad reviews are better than happy ones, but don’t take the bad ones too much to heart. Also, when you spot a really nasty one that goes at the author personally instead of the book? Be sure to click “No” beside the question, “Was this review helpful to you?”
Related articles
- Do Readers “Owe” Writers? (portablemagicblog.com)
- How do you eat yours? Reviewing that is. (masonsabre.com)
- The Power of Urban Fiction Book Reviews (platinumstarz.wordpress.com)
- What Friends Can Do For Authors (lawritersblog.com)
- How to Write a Book Review on Amazon (jenniferfgarcia.com)
- A rant about reviews… (eblco.wordpress.com)
- Most Reviewed Amazon Book? (abaditya.com)
- What Should I Do About a Bad Review on Amazon? (bookmarketingmaven.typepad.com)
Filed under: reviews, Art, Arts, Author, bad reviews, books, E-book, good reviews, Literature, Publish, review, supporting authors, thoughtful reviews, writer