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Link This | Email this | Blog This | Comments (11)
How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers?May 13, 2008We're going through the 1000+ applications we've received via our call for PW reviewers. Took a break and read Sara Nelson's post re: publicists. Made me think: what makes a good reviewer? In reading the cover letters --- and I've read hundreds this week --- one thing struck me above all. I stopped caring about credentials. What I looked for was a letter that made me want to keep reading. It was "show me, don't tell me." I picked the letters that, in the space of three sentences, gave me complete confidence in the person behind them. That made made think: I can trust you with someone's work. It's an elusive thing to try to isolate. What is it in a review that makes you trust it, and the reviewer behind it? How did you come to trust the reviewers to whom you regularly turn?Would be a big help to know right about now. Posted by Michael Scharf on May 13, 2008 | Comments (11)
May 14, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Kat Brokaw commented: I have to say it's a willingness to admit not everything was perfect, or not everything was drek. For instance, I LOVE pretty much anything written by George RR Martin--we're talking borderline Misery, here. And his Ice and Fire series is so good I'm force-reading it to my teenage daughter. But I'm willing to admit that his last book, the bit with Circe came off a little contrived. Love a book or hate it, but be willing to give it props/boos where necessary.
May 14, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Mary Louise commented: I like a reviewer who can be clever but doesn't make me feel (he or) she is just trying to make herself sound good with obfuscating language. I like details (I almost always throw in a few quotes from the material so that readers can get an idea of the author's style) but not too many plot points. A plot summary is NOT a review! I never reveal secrets of the plot, and if another reviewer does, she has turned me off the material. I also have a pet peeve -- I can't stand it when a reviewer says a piece is "evocative." That's meaningless to me. Evocative of what? Explain.
May 14, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Jerri Patton commented: Michael Dirda is my favorite reviewer. I think he only reviews books he likes, if not he always finds something good to say about the book. I don't like reviewers that give a book a bad review. Why give a bad review, someone else might like the book.
May 14, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Jerri Patton commented: Michael Dirda is my favorite reviewer. I think he only reviews books he likes, if not he always finds something good to say about the book. I don't like reviewers that give a book a bad review. Why give a bad review, someone else might like the book.
May 18, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Jacqueline Seewald commented: As one of those 1000+ anonymous responders, I have to say that I think a strong resume really is important. Perhaps you should ask for a sample review if you want to examine writing style to see if it's suited to PW reviewer needs?
May 21, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Rae Bryant commented: Reviewing a work is more than summation. It is an analysis, a dissection, which gives the audience a keyhole view, and it is more than merely taking the proverbial puzzle apart. The reviewer will often garnish the analysis with opinion, and rightly so. The opinion may seduce or turn-off a more impressionable reader, certainly, but for the intelligent, independent reader, reviewer opinion should not be the determining factor. Instead, the review should act as a highlighter, a bright yellow guide that teases the palate, hopefully, with the pieces of the work— characterization, conflict, themes, motifs, etc. These elements should take center stage, offering direct evidence of the work without spoiling it, so that potential readers can determine for themselves, individually, if the work suits or not, regardless of the reviewer’s opinion. Remember that good analysis will bring out the strengths and weaknesses of any work, which is all good and well. Who would want to read a computer perfect fiction? It is in our shared imperfection that we connect most often in literature and otherwise. It is this reader’s opinion that it is in striving toward the perfect imperfection, that artists are born.
June 11, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Tasses commented: I like a reviewer who incorporates her personal thoughts and experiences with the story, one who is perceptive of the themes and human conditions. Next, I like a reviewer who is honest. Readers can tell when you're schmoozing. I also like reviews to be succinct. The longer the review, the less likely I am to read it. My time is valuable; I'd rather spend it reading a story than a review.
August 20, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Liz commented: I review books online on my blog and I have to say that I find reviewing books to be an eye opening experience. I love it and can talk books and authors for hours on end. And I would like to think that it shows in my own reviews - love 'em or hate 'em, you have to be honest and balanced in your review - as someone stated: even if you didn't much like the book, you KNOW that there are others out there who would love it. I always bear in mind that reviewing a book is commenting on someone's time spent writing it - I've read a few books where I didn't like the story that much, but the writing, plotting and character development was amazing...so I say that - always focus on the good but be honest.
September 18, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Lana Kuhns commented: My favorite reviewers talk a lot. They say what they liked, don't reveal too much about the plot and are passionate. Of course honesty is important too. Even if they didn't like the book, they should be able to acknowledge the strengths of what they've read
December 19, 2008
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? kub commented: reviews are dead. we'd rather go to the bookstore and look for ourselves. reviews are for old people who need someone to tell them what to buy. That's the old people way, middlemen.
October 14, 2009
In response to: How Did You Find Your Favorite Reviewers? Mona commented: how could I contact you mr Michael Scharf for an ergant help? I`m from Egypt
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