I
had an excellent illustration of the ongoing war of no reason on Amazon
yesterday. My novel HARD CASE has been selling very well. The moment it
accumulates a number of five star reviews an incoherent one star book killer
hits. Yesterday, the novel received a wonderful five star review, and a one
star hit piece. Here is the one star hit by William H. White:
“Badly edited and poorly written.
Might appeal to an adolescent boy but surely not to an adult. A comic book in
words.”
Here
is the five star review by Martin Fricke
This book has everything: gripping
fight scenes, rich character development, thrilling plots, good composition,
and even absorbing romance. I'm going right on to DeLeo's next one, Hard Case
#2.
We
as authors wonder if both of these reviews can be true. Yes, they can. John
Harding, the star character in HARD CASE, is a larger than life, completely
fictional and unrealistic, pulp fiction superhero a bit like in comic books. I
wrote him that way, because many times, we as writers write what we love to
read.
Mr.
White, for whatever reason, bought HARD CASE without bothering to read the
three chapter free Amazon preview, doesn’t care much for my pulp fiction, and
took the time to save other readers from themselves. To a reader with elevated
literary tastes, I’ll even give him his ‘Badly edited and poorly written’ comment.
HARD CASE is neither Hemingway nor even Lee Child.
Mr.
Fricke, on the other hand, felt everything I hoped a reader would when reading
HARD CASE. He enjoys the same type novels I do. It doesn’t mean Mr. Fricke
doesn’t enjoy many other literary genres, but he recognizes pulp fiction, likes
it, and doesn’t expect a literary masterpiece. It may be he became so absorbed
in the storyline that he missed the ‘Badly edited and poorly written’ parts. I
many times overlook flaws while reading myself. :)
I’m
not blogging about the merit of either review, or a marketplace that allows ‘book
killings’, even when they provide lengthy free previews. I’m here to face the
facts. We can’t do anything about the ‘book killers’. I wish we could. If a
writer’s novel becomes popular on Amazon, it will attract ‘book killers’. I’ve
read one star hit pieces on Lee Child’s books that made me cringe. Lee Child
does not shortchange a reader. His books are good sized and provide many
chapters for free previewing on Amazon. The one star hit pieces on his novels could
only have happened because the reader completely ignored the free Amazon
preview. We can point out the free preview, but it doesn’t do much good if they’re
ignored for the express purpose of destroying a book’s sales – and unless you
want a troll army marching up your ass, whining about reviews is a waste of
time. Lee Child doesn’t, and I’m not going to either. :)
I’m
writing this today because there is only one thing we can do to face down the ‘book
killers’ – write more of what we love to write, providing multiple targets for
them in the marketplace. A writer can’t write to please a ‘book killer’ because
the killer isn’t there writing one star hit pieces to help you understand your
shortcomings. The killer is there to kill the book’s sales. It’s an already
documented fact with numerous media articles condemning the practice. Once we
realize that fact, we only have one course of action – write more books, and
write them the way we want. Expanding our fan base helps us fight back in the
only way we can - with new material. Plus, writing more successful books really
pisses off the ‘killers’. :) So, to my writer friends: don’t fret, just write. Here’s
the paperback cover of my new entry into the front lines, in partnership with
my friend and publisher, RJ Parker.