A new example of
the skilled BK showed up just in time for my third blog series on Book Killers.
A couple of posts ago, I illustrated in words and an example what a Book Killer
is. The Book Killer wrote a hit piece on my novel Cold Blooded, but listed
reasons for his Book Killing that simply did not exist in the novel. He claimed
my main character murdered people in front of their children, and that he died
at the end. Neither happened in the novel, so his BK status was easily
established.
Today, I’ll
cover the stealthy BK. He comes up with just enough vitriol for Amazon to allow
his Book Killer review to be published, but reveals nothing other than a
sweeping ‘utter trash’ depiction of the novel. This is a BK with talent, who
never read the book, but doesn’t reveal his status by making mistakes about
what happens inside a novel he hasn’t read. Another clue is the fourth book in
the Hard Case series is the only item on Amazon he’s reviewed. I’m very
honored. :)
1.0
out of 5 stars Trash, March 27, 2014
By
This
review is from: HARD CASE (The John Harding Series #4) - A Violent
Life (Kindle Edition)
Utter trash,
don't even think about buying it. If I could think of worse things to say about
this book I would.
This type of BK
can’t be battled with, other than a polite reminder about the ‘Look Inside’
feature Amazon offers with three full chapters free. This is about all we as
authors can do with a talented BK:
‘I'm sorry you
didn't like Hard Case Book IV: A Violent Life. Because Amazon gives the reader
'Three' sample chapters free in the very generous 'Look Inside' feature, you
could have saved yourself some money and time by taking advantage of the
excellent reader's tool Amazon provides. All of the items you disliked about
the book were clearly on display in the preview. I hope in the future, you will
avail yourself of the 'Look Inside' feature and avoid novels clearly not to
your taste.’
Of course this
reminder is an author’s only choice in dealing with a BK troll, because waging
a troll war will not undo his review, nor will it prove anything. Taking a
troll attack personally is a waste of time. A BK doesn’t review your book to
give you insights into your writing. They hit your book to kill it. Good
reviews following up on a BK’s hit piece buries it a bit, but we have to
believe in our readers’ intelligence.
Hard Case BookIV: A Violent Life garnered twenty-six 5 star reviews, and five 4 star reviews
before the BK struck. It had achieved a ranking in the top fifty paid books on
Amazon in the very competitive categories of Thriller, Mystery, and
Assassinations. Since being released on March 1st, it has done very
well, because the Hard Case series has developed a real fan base. Logically, a
BK looks rather foolish doing a hit piece on the fourth book in a series.
Actual readers of the first three, may well be disappointed by how the fourth
book in a series they like develops, and will state their reasoning. A BK does
what Mr. McEvoy did.
I know I’m
taking a chance doing this BK series on the blog, but I have a lot of writing
friends who stop by here, or read my posts on Google + and Twitter. Plus, I’m
not much of a ‘hide in the corner’ type. I’ve seen authors go to pieces because
of these goofy BK’s. An author writes a novel. It begins to take off in sales
and ratings, and suddenly a BK troll swoops in for the kill. Being able to
recognize the difference between an honest ‘bad’ review and a BK troll review
is important. A legitimate ‘bad’ review usually contains hints about our
writing that we can improve upon. That’s it for today on the Amazon troll
magnet marketplace. :)
4 comments:
People constantly find new ways to make me despair of the human race.
I think soon we're going to find out what's really behind this BK stuff, Charles. Amazon has been building their own corral of authors, including some formerly big name indies. Amazon lists a different imprint for each genre they handle. Just for fun, I'm going to check the authors' reviews under their banner. If none of them are getting hit by obvious BK's, I may have to do a fourth blog piece on BK's, and a possible protection racket. :)
Sounds like you've got these categories down to a fine art, Bernard. :)
I have had experience, Raine. :) There are some very interesting developments I've run across concerning authors under Amazon Publishing's protective blanket. I'm not finished researching or deciding how far I want to go with this though. :)
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