rj_anderson: From a quote by Pamela Dean (Book Book Book)
rj_anderson ([personal profile] rj_anderson) wrote2008-11-01 11:08 am

Sticks, Stones, and Bad Reviews

No worries about that subject line, I haven't personally had any bad reviews yet (phew!). But then, I've hardly had any reviews yet at all... and I've been thinking about how to handle it when the comments really start coming in.

To any of my fellow writers who may read this, whether you're ficcers or in a critique group working on getting published or (especially) if you're an established pro -- how do you deal with reviews? Do you:

A) read them avidly, good and bad, trying to see what you can learn from them? (And if so, have they actually taught you anything, or just alternately exhilarated and depressed you?)

B) read only the good ones, and ignore the bad? (And if so, how do you manage to do this?)

C) read no reviews whatsoever? (And if so, why?)

I'm still undecided about the whole thing myself. I love hearing nice things about my writing (who doesn't?) but I also don't want to turn a deaf ear to any advice that could help me improve. On the other hand, as has often been said, "reviews are for readers", not the author, and many authors feel that reading them is really not helpful on a practical level and is only likely to discourage you and hurt your confidence in your next project. I'm not sure what the argument is for reading no reviews at all, though.

Anyway, if you have thoughts on this subject, as an author or a reader or a critic, I'd be glad to hear them.

[identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com 2008-11-01 08:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Critiques I am grateful for...reviews...I have to be in a zen mode. I mostly ignore them, because they don't always seem to help me learn something. One hates a book for what another loves. One says it's terrible, and gets all the names wromg and the plot points, which indicates they read then pages and decided the whole was worthless. Another read carefully, and still hated it because it wasn't more like X. And so on.

Reviews mostly serve as a reminder just how little world cares about what I am most passionate about--I guess I always need to remember that, lest my ego ever inflate.

[identity profile] rj-anderson.livejournal.com 2008-11-04 12:36 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, yes, and good point about the difference between critiques and reviews. And good readers and bad ones, too.