Home » Posts tagged "reviewers" (Page 3)

Integrity in Writing Reviews

Integrity is so important. It is the value of emphasis that the master teacher is reinforcing with my kids in tae kwon do. Truthfulness, along with kindness, are the things that we want them to know we value. And it’s also something we work hard to model, both in our lives and in the kinds of reviews we write and publish.

There are a lot of review sites that will only publish positive reviews. If the reviewer doesn’t like the book he doesn’t write the review. That’s okay, everyone has a different philosophy, but here we think that to serve you the best you ought to know what isn’t worth your time or money as well as what is so astonishing that it’s worth it to pay the extra money. We try to be professional and tell you what we think, but without being nasty. There are librarians who write reviews for us, and people who truly love the genre, and we support them in their views. It’s hard to give out a negative review, especially a respectful one, and I so respect those of our reviewers who are honest when it comes to writing a difficult review (sometimes those reviews pay off in unexpected ways– like a writer revising his book, or a reader who really appreciated the review).

I know there are a lot of fake reviews out there– reviews that rave about how great a book is, or are really negative about one, that are with cynical intent, or even to drive (or decrease) sales. It saddens me that there are so many, because the way most books end up in someone’s hands is when someone they trust recommends the book to them. But with so many fake reviews, who can you trust? If I only bought the books the book critic at the Wall Street Journal recommended I’d end up frustrated because her tastes are different from mine… but at least I can trust her to give her honest opinion. I’d like to be able to trust that the opinions I see in reviews are genuine, too, since they’re more likely to live on the same planet with me.

But even if a review isn’t written with integrity, and the number of these that aren’t is expected to increase, Digital Book World reports that reviewers who are compensated for writing positive (or negative) reviews may be committing a crime. Incentives to write positive paid reviews are expected to increase as companies attempt to increase their market share, but every time someone writes a paid review he or she deprives the rest of us from making an informed choice.

We don’t take compensation here. Although we are sent review copies, anyone who contacts us ought to know that sending us a book doesn’t guarantee them a positive review. But we write honest reviews. You can count on that.

Wanted: Volunteer Reviewers

MonsterLibrarian.com was started in 2005, while Dylan was finishing up his degree in library science. A voracious reader of horror fiction, he discovered that horror readers were an underserved population in the public library.  He wanted to change that, so he started up this site.

At first he was the only reviewer, writing short reviews of the books he owned, that he thought librarians should be aware of. Because of the attraction of horror fiction to reluctant readers, he also started teen and kids’ sections to the site. As a children’s and school librarian, I was happy to help out.

And then people started sending us books– more than we could possibly review on our own.  We discovered that volunteer reviewers are essential to making MonsterLibrarian.com a useful resource to librarians. Many of the reviewers we’ve had over the years have put serious time into the site, contributing their talents and energy in an amazing number of ways. These are true lovers of horror fiction who really believe in the importance of getting out the news about great horror fiction.

The site keeps growing and we keep getting more books and requests for review.  And thus, we are once again looking for volunteer reviewers to take these off our hands and get the word out about great books.

If you would like to review for us, please email us at monsterlibrarian@monsterlibrarian.com.

We’ll get our review guidelines out to you so you can see if you are interested.

If there’s anyone out there who would like to review teen or children’s books, these are very popular parts of our site, although we don’t get many review copies– but if you’d like to start out like we did, reviewing books from your own collection, you’d rock my world.

We can’t do it without volunteer reviewers. Please spread the word! And thank you for being part of MonsterLibrarian.com!

Ravenous for Reading?

A nifty little news article in Publishers Weekly mentioned that erotica ebook publisher Ravenous Romance has now been joined by a “thriller” line, Ravenous Shadows, with John Skipp as editorial director. Having read the very short summaries of the first few titles provided in the article, I’d say calling these books thrillers is a massive understatement. Skipp’s idea, according to the article, is to make it possible to read a book in the time it would take to watch a movie, so the books are short- 30,000-60,000 words.

One of our reviewers, David Agranoff, has often made positive comments about some of the excellent novellas that come his way that are just the right length for a plane ride. So I think Skipp is on to something here. Readers of ebooks consume them absolutely ravenously- I am guilty of it, for sure. It’s so easy to do, and ebooks are so accessible, while some physical novellas are available only in limited editions. I think Skipp has a winning concept here. With plans to publish 30-40 ebooks a year, this should open doors for writers as well as readers. It will be very interesting to see what comes of this.