georgelee5786
I'll never let you down when you're riding with me
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2022
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Gonna slide on em
Any review is a good review.. Even if they are Gordon Ramsey type.I've actually been holding off harsh reviews because I thought authors would dislike them. Who wants to be suddenly pounded into a pulp when you haven't even asked for it?
But I recently found a couple scathing reviews(?) written to the author, not the reader. That...surprised me. I didn't know that was ok.
I've come to this site from NU. That site is filled with translations, and so nobody writes reviews hoping to get the author's attention. That's why my reviews are written more as a guide for other readers. Usually in cases where the story doesn't have a proper synopsis, or when it gives something drastically different from what was promised. I just add no, this is what the story is actually about!
But now I'm pondering whether to start plummeling random authors. I hope people don't think I'm being mean...
Are you guys ok with this? Or nah?
If the work merits it, then yes. I would like to imagine most of mine is not that bad, but it probably is.I've actually been holding off harsh reviews because I thought authors would dislike them. Who wants to be suddenly pounded into a pulp when you haven't even asked for it?
But I recently found a couple scathing reviews(?) written to the author, not the reader. That...surprised me. I didn't know that was ok.
I've come to this site from NU. That site is filled with translations, and so nobody writes reviews hoping to get the author's attention. That's why my reviews are written more as a guide for other readers. Usually in cases where the story doesn't have a proper synopsis, or when it gives something drastically different from what was promised. I just add no, this is what the story is actually about!
But now I'm pondering whether to start plummeling random authors. I hope people don't think I'm being mean...
Are you guys ok with this? Or nah?
You’ve pretty much touched a point. Many people are not good at clearly getting across their thoughts.I also think reviews have to have certain limits.
What I mean is this:
I won't take anything else seriously in reviews that come under such a short chapter count because nobody, not even Sherlock Reading Holmes, could discern the plot of a 100+ chapter story from just 5. Even if they turn out right, it simply isn't right to do so because there is no guarantee.
- If you review a book after 1 to 5 chapters or with another metric, below 15-20% of the actual chapter count?
- Then you better be critiquing the grammar and other related issues and not about the plot.
Plus, many times, what I see is not critiquing a book or a story. It is nothing but bitching about what the reader didn't like. Usually, what others call critiquing something is just complaining. They are not offering examples or insight into why they think it doesn't work in context with the story. There are no possible examples of how it could be made work or comparisons with other works where the same thing worked. It is usually just:
"I don't like it, so it's stupid."
So, once again, disliking something doesn't mean you are critiquing it. It is bitching about it.
I especially hate those reviews that come early, predicting what the book is about, wholly off the mark. Because they left the review early, they never realized that their words were proved wrong later on regarding the plot and their critique of said plot. But their damage had already been done and sent possible readers away because they began crying in the name of critiquing.
It was what made me ignore all reviews on movies, shows, games, books, and everything else. People bitch and call it critiquing. I don't believe anything, only my two eyes. Ratings are worthless.
And if I dislike something, I don't stick around, just move on.
Yeah, this was my main concern. If I review a novel, it means I love the heck out of it, I just think it could be better.
Maybe the pace drags in a spot. Maybe they go overly flowery. Or maybe their transitions feel abrupt. But I don't want to drag down the writer or do anything detrimental to them while I'm having fun. It makes me feel sad that some other readers may not read the novel due to my review.
This helps. I think I'll do that instead.
That is only about 80% true. If you go on Substack, there are a lot of non-editors offering advice about how THEY succeeded. And one of the classic books on writing, Strunck and White's Elements of Style was written by E. B. White, at the request of (and edited by) his partner, Strunck, a literature professor (who also did professional editing as a side gig) IIRC.Another thing to point out is how the reviews work in the professional publishing, or at least, how they worked before the Internet become Internet we know.
And if you are curious about where all the writing advice came from, it is not by the people who succeeded and their book sold well, it's from people who rejected them. Editors. An ultimate egopolis, written not as advice to do better, be better, but an ultimate guide how to please the ego of one arbiter with too much power.
Brandon Sanderson organises lectures on how to write the fantasy, or "magic system", too, but overall, the interaction between the (professional) writer and the reader is often spare, if not existent.That is only about 80% true. If you go on Substack, there are a lot of non-editors offering advice about how THEY succeeded. And one of the classic books on writing, Strunck and White's Elements of Style was written by E. B. White, at the request of (and edited by) his partner, Strunck, a literature professor (who also did professional editing as a side gig) IIRC.
But the vast majority is definitely from editors.
Eh... in webnovels, reviews are also left by readers to help other readers know what to expect. I don't do it often, but if I see a novel that promises to be something it is not, I leave a review telling readers the truth which is not wholly positive. And some people critique books they like, too, but give high stars. So I disagree that reviews are marketing.Brandon Sanderson organises lectures on how to write the fantasy, or "magic system", too, but overall, the interaction between the (professional) writer and the reader is often spare, if not existent.
The interaction you see here - "Oh no, you couldn't put this in the book" - is usually one between the editor and the writer, and usually, it's the writer which needs to back down, even though there are exceptions in that too. I suspect the editors would keep their bi.... complaints ... to a minimum if they are interacting with someone famous like Stephen King or aforementioned Brandon Sanderson, as there is the risk that the "star" would slam the door and go to deal with competitors which would accept them, but in most cases writers don't have that much choice.
However, here, you as the reader could interfere with the creation process from the very start, demotivate the writer from continuing, or to even try, and (unlike the editor-writer relationship) there is more than one person to please.
You couldn't please everyone, but you need to, because not only you don't have an editor, you don't have a marketing team writing your reviews either, making the creative process very fragile and easy to disrupt with the negativity, and publishing (posting) process easy to sabotage with the negative reviews which influence the visibility of the story.
Influence of the reviews as marketing remains the same, but this time, it's completely crowd sourced and in hands of people which aren't invested in your success (unlike professional marketing which is paid the share), and people could, and in most cases would, cause irreparable damage to the story by simply disliking it.
Damage is lasting, the "reviews" unremovable and most likely, done with malicious intent. As much as the Royal Road pretends the review bombing doesn't exist, even their rules explicitly mention you shouldn't mention the author activity on forums in reviews. If it was ever lifted, 9 out of the 10 reviews would say "author said something, and I punish him" or "hahahaha, burn b****" or "I want to destroy competition".
This doesn't happen in the professional publishing.
Opinions of the readers are kept separate from the reviews themselves, and while it could cause damage through word of mouth (to the much dismay of the journalists controlling the access media) the influence of the readers isn't that great. At least, not on reviews. In truth, the strictly quid pro quo relationship of the (RR's) review swap is closest to how reviewing usually works for professional. You leave the nice review on my story, and there is some reward for you for doing so.
Yes, I cannot stop anyone from leaving negative reviews, but ...
... it doesn't change anything on the fact that reviews are marketing, and as any marketing they are supposed to help with the sales (views), even at the cost of deceiving the reader.
...and that's a problem on its own.Eh... in webnovels, reviews are also left by readers to help other readers know what to expect. I don't do it often, but if I see a novel that promises to be something it is not, I leave a review telling readers the truth which is not wholly positive. And some people critique books they like, too, but give high stars. So I disagree that reviews are marketing.
Twenty years ago, or more, this would have been a serious concern, but they did get slammed for a few fraudulent cases and would likely look beyond the cover image (though they MIGHT sue the artist, and with enough basis that you might have to change it), unlike the reviewer.On the other hand, Henry Rider: Clown Hunter only has three reviews on Amazon right now, and one of them is a one star rating that only says "Just a Harley Quin and Joker fanfiction. That says it all. Doesn't get any more then that." That one I'm not okay with because it's objectively incorrect, and could potentially get me in trouble if someone from DC saw it and decided that was enough to justify suing me for copyright infringement. I know the chances of that happening are astronomical, but big companies have sued smaller people for stupider things.