Sunday, 26 January 2025

One-Star Reviews

I was speaking to a fellow author recently. She has written a fabulous and a very interesting book. It got onto some prestigious prize lists. It was reviewed positively in big publications. I read her book and it stays with me - and it is not too much to say that it has changed me. We strayed into talking about reviews - not just the big reviews in newspapers and literary magazines, but the ones online. It seems that this person's book had received some negative reviews in these online places - one-star reviews that were highly critical and even a little personal. This fellow writer no longer reads reviews of her work - online reviews especially. For her own good mental health, she explained, she avoids confronting them. 

When a writer pours themself into a book - maybe over years... hours and weeks and months of hard work sitting alone at a desk, and the heart and soul is emptied onto the page, then a one-star review can be hard to swallow. Can feel like a hard stone thrown or the slash of a sharp knife. I get that. But what about all the great reviews of her book that she is then also missing?

I have said here before how I used to enter short story competitions - sometimes as many as sixty in a year. Some of the stories did extraordinarily well - I say that having been a short story competition judge and knowing how hard it is to think of stories as better or worse than each other, to put them into some sort of order. I recall that when a story of mine won a competition - even a big competition - I was elated and remained elated for maybe three hours; whenever a story did not even reach the longlist, when a story of mine, as they say, bombed, I was devastated for days. I had a 40% hit rate with short story competitions, which is, I am told, very high. I have won dozens of competitions and been on the podium for dozens more. But in reality a 40% hit rate means that 60% of the time I was not doing well - and that's a lot of hard and devastating days.

It goes with the territory. Putting a short story or a book out there, into the world, is always a risk - the risk is that someone will love it to the moon and back, or hate it and want to shit all over it. I can understand this fellow writer not reading any of her reviews - it can be hard.

Today my new book - WOMAN IN BLUE - got its first one-star review... in amongst some pretty wonderful five-star and four-star reviews. Indeed the book, not even released until the end of next month, has predominantly reaped five and four-star reviews and plenty of them, so that this one-star review looks like an outlier. But still!

A writer should not write to be loved. A writer writes because he/she is driven to it. Not just one book but another and another. A writer writes to be read and hopefully for people to find what they have to say interesting or relevant or important. To be read is the thing. And so I am grateful to that one-star reviewer as much as I am to the four-star and fiver-star reviewers - for reading my new book. I thank them for that. I am sorry that they did not like what I wrote and I hope the next book they read gives them what they are looking for. 

There. That feels better and feels real and feels like me; and it also makes me feel less devastated. Writers have to learn this lesson, I think.



Tuesday, 7 January 2025

Tales From The Reading Room

 This year is only just begun and yet so much on my plate, so many wonderful things. 

First - I have a new project rattling around in my head (alongside the seven other projects that are taking shape!). That always feels good, especially when I wake thinking about it and I sit up and scribble my thoughts down in a yellow notebook.

Second - 'WOMAN IN BLUE', although not offically published until February 20th, has already been sent out to early readers for review and some of the reviews have been wonderfully good. See Net Galley and Goodreads for a flavour of the book. I have several bookish events lined up to start the promotion of this book - though my head is also still with last year's publication 'HOPE NEVER KNEW HORIZON'.

And thirdly - and the real reason for this post - this week, Victoria at 'Tales From the Reading Room' posted up her review of 'HOPE'. I already knew it was going to be a positive review as Victoria had selected it as one of her books of the year. But the review she produced is not only detailed and thorough, but is also stunning and quite took my breath away. I am so grateful to Victoria and all the book bloggers who have said such wonderful things about 'Hope' over these past nine months - the book holds a very special place in my heart and I am so thrilled that people like it as much as they do.

https://litlove.wordpress.com/2025/01/05/hope-never-knew-horizon/