Showing posts with label #Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Reviews. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Reader expectations - Romance novels

Recently, I saw a freebie advertised for an author I like, an author I met at a conference when her first book had been published. She's very prolific, and market savvy, and I've enjoyed most of her books, so I clicked through figuring to download. Then I hesitated.

Authors like reviews. They need to see where they're hitting the mark and where they're missing, so even 1 star reviews, while demoralizing, have value. 

We (authors) don't get it right every time. Sometimes we hit a sour note with our readers, and based on the reviews I read of this author's latest promo, she missed the mark. The first review (and I hate when something like this is the first review you see because it's very subjective) said, "... no one had mentioned the 2 sex scenes near the end." She gave the book 1 star. I tossed that review aside because--come on--this is a romance. You have a better than 50/50 chance it's going to have sex in it. Or have reader expectations changed? 

I went on to read more reviews, because that one seemed out of touch with the market. There were other complaints about the book, things I believe should have been in the book description--the blurb. Based on what the reviews said, the cover was also grossly misleading, so now I'm getting a better picture of "what's wrong with this book?" The whole first page of reviews were three stars or less.

So, two points I want to make. 

  • First - Books are put into categories. Romances often include sex. Some people buy them expressly for that reason. The level of stuff "on the page" varies, from erotic, which is all about the sex, to steamy, which means the sex has to be a natural evolution of the romance (but should NOT be gratuitous). These scenes have been part of the romance genre for decades. In the old days, they were referred to as bodice rippers. Nowadays, the women in the stories have much more control over the action (as well they should!).
For readers who don't want the steamy stuff on the page, they can choose a category called "Sweet." There is also the "door closed" phrase, which means when the characters get down to business, they close the door and don't invite the reader in.
 
HOWEVER, going back to that gratuitous thing - Some authors believe readers expect a sex scene from them and it becomes "obligatory." I'm here to tell you I don't buy into that. Maybe readers are looking for something steamy from certain authors, but if it doesn't flow naturally with the rest of the story, it feels obligatory. It shouldn't be there out of obligation, but rather as a natural course of events between the characters, something that moves the story forward instead of "and then they had sex." (I just read another of this same author's books where she threw in a sex scene near the end because she probably felt obliged to and it ruined the book for me--I'm sensing a pattern...)
  • Second - The blurb tells the reader what the book is about and helps them determine if this is something that would appeal to them. If you leave out an important detail, readers are going to be unhappy. End of story. In the example I'm using, the hero is disabled. He lost a leg in the war. The book cover shows him standing on two feet embracing the woman. Nice romance cover, but misleading. Nowhere in the blurb does it mention the hero is disabled. I learned that detail from the reviews. In fact, in reading the reviews, much of what readers highlighted that made them unhappy was not covered in the blurb--unpleasant surprises. That's a problem. I've read disabled heroes before and enjoyed the stories. Mary Balogh is very good at making this type of man both sympathetic and heroic. Here's one of her blurbs:

"Desperate to escape his mother’s matchmaking, Vincent Hunt, Viscount Darleigh, flees to a remote country village. But even there, another marital trap is sprung. So when Miss Sophia Fry’s intervention on his behalf finds her unceremoniously booted from her guardian’s home, Vincent is compelled to act. He may have been blinded in battle, but he can see a solution to both their problems: marriage."
Marketing books is about setting reader's expectations. It's not an easy balance, but withholding important information isn't always preventing a "spoiler." Giving your reader an unexpected surprise might not be appreciated. 

Readers need to understand what they're buying, what to expect from a genre - that's on the reader. Authors need to properly market their books and let the readers know what they're getting - that's on the author.

 **Newsletter subscribers - winners were picked yesterday.

Congratulations Susan B, Sue G, and Teresa!** 


Wednesday, May 20, 2020

About reviews...

They tell us as authors not to pay too much attention to reviews. Should we solicit them? Yes. Reviews help other people decide whether or not a book is worth their time. Most of the time. Some of the time. There are the odd reviews where a book doesn't connect with people, or they miss the point, or they just plain didn't like it. Hey, not everybody is going to think the same way, and that's okay. Sometimes people write a review that's completely unrelated to the actual product. "One star, the book was supposed to be here Monday and didn't get here until Friday."

I'm reading a book right now that is by a best seller from a major publishing house. It's pretty good overall, but there's a subject that's not sitting well with me. It's sort of a "diamond in the rough" sort of book where the girl is a tomboy, always has been. She resents people telling her to be more girly and trying to make her into something she's not, but then she has to wear a dress for a "girl" function and suddenly she thinks she should be what other people want her to be - girly. I'm not buying it, as much as the author is trying to convince me, that this girl WANTS (suddenly) to be more girly after 27 years, and all those people she resented are now somehow right. Sticking with the book - I expect it will get better, but it is raising my hackles. Does that make it a bad book? No... just not one I'm on board with.

But I digress. The reason for my post today is that despite being told not to check reviews on my books, I do. I don't get my nose out of shape when someone writes something ridiculous about one of my books, someone who misses the point (like I'm missing the point with the tomboy book), but when someone is enjoying my books, I do get the warm fuzzies. Big time. Nice reviews are encouragement to keep going, or guide you in the right direction. I sometimes wonder if I'm connecting with my audience, and hearing back from them confirms that I am (or I'm not). Currently, there is a reader who is making their way through my Epitaph series (shameless plug, the first in series is FREE!). Lots of people have reviewed that first book, and many have gone on to review the second. Then things tend to slow down. When my sister read the series, she told me which books she liked and which she didn't, and when she didn't, she said it wasn't that there was anything wrong, just that she was burned out on the series. I get that. I've burned out on my favorite authors after reading them back to back to back, too. My current reader (who I can identify because they leave their name) has been leaving glowing reviews about how they wonder if the next book will be as good as the last, and so far I haven't let them down. I LOVE reading reviews like that. When I know someone is enjoying the books, I want to give them more, as opposed to those people who say "I just don't get it," who make me want to give up and take up knitting (I can't knit to save my soul, that will NOT be the replacement of choice).

So moral of the story, those books that people have connected with, that they've left me glowing reviews on, those are the ones I gravitate toward writing more of. The ones that people don't bother to review, or that reviews are so-so, I move on from. As I finish the Hillendale series, I'm hoping to see more reviews so I know whether or not people are connecting with my "Practical Magic meets The Good Witch with a Spirit Walker thrown in" series, or if it was a lark on my part. Sometimes I venture into quirky territory just because my brain goes that direction. Hey, let me tell you about the book I wrote about fairies in the desert that is sitting in my desk drawer that one of my friends keeps telling me I should share with the world (I don't think I'm ready to do that, but ya never know!). In the meantime, I'm on the home stretch in Hillendale 3 (tentatively titled THE HIDDEN GRIMOIRE) and after that I expect to move back into my regular romance territory.

Carry on...