Reviews are the
least expensive and most effective form of book promotion. More than 300 titles
are published each day. There is no way anyone can know and rank them. That is
why bookstores, libraries and readers rely so heavily on book reviews. Reviews
sell books.
Occasionally a book receives a negative review. The
reviewer might be having a bad day, might be envious of your success or may
dislike your stand on some issues. Take heart. Any review is a good review
because it results in ink. Exposure, kind or unkind, will bring in orders.
Focus on the amount of ink, not the character of the words.
No one
remembers the negativity of the review but they do remember the title of the
book. ~ John Kremer, 1001 Ways to Market Your Book. While some
readers may be discouraged from buying your book from a bad review, others will
see through the review and buy the book because the subject interests them.
Many book reviewers are mean spirited. Even if a reviewer likes a
book, he or she must find fault and write snide and/or patronizing little
asides about the authors character or motives that demonstrate the
reviewers intellectual and moral superiority. ~ Andrew Greeley,
author. Most reviewers are underpaid and overworked. Their
contributions to bookselling go unrewarded and unrecognized. No one ever built
a statue to honor a reviewer.
Just write the best book you are capable
of writing; then, take solace in the fact that most people do not buy books on
the basis of any review they actually read. ~ Steve Wasserman, book editor, The
Los Angeles Times.
Few new products get the free publicity showered on
books. Authors, publishers and booksellers owe a debt of thanks to reviewers.
Hope for good ink and be grateful for bad ink. Ink is ink and ink is free. A
bad review is better than no review.
Dan Poynter does not want
you to die with a book still inside you. You have the ingredients and he has
your recipe. Dan has written more than 100 books since 1969 including Writing
Nonfiction and The Self- Publishing Manual. For more help on book writing, see
http://ParaPub.com. © All
Rights Reserved.