The internet has come alive…in anger…over a recent article penned by a YA author who essentially chronicles her descent into madness (my words) and criminal activity (her words) by admitting to trolling, harassing, and stalking a reviewer who gave her a negative review. I’m not going to get into it as it has been dissected over and over with the skill of a top-notch surgeon by numerous blogs. You can read all about it in the following links from who I feel best summed up the events.
Smart Bitches,Trashy Books
Dear Author
Alex Hurst
Reviewer/author flame wars are not a recent trend. For decades authors have responded unfavorably to what they deem unfair and overly critical reviews while reviewers have struck out to punish authors who made the mistake of saying anything to begin with. It’s a nasty sometimes vicious cycle and unfortunately doesn’t seem to ending anytime soon. Luckily, only a small demographic seems to engage in this type of behavior. Overall, authors and reviewers are lovely, funny, intelligent, people who get along rather well.
I started reviewing in 2010 when I joined Smexy Books. I met Mandi on twitter, fell in love with her, and demanded she become my friend. She played hard to get for a while but she eventually succumbed to my irresistible charm and we’ve been bestest buddies ever since. I’m not sure what I would have done had Mandi not given me a chance on her blog. Well, nothing drastic of course. LOL However, I was at a strange crossroad in my life and her friendship was the life-preserver I needed. I’m sure I’ve never told her that but she gave me a sense of purpose when I was feeling rather worthless.
I’ve always had a love for reading and being a naturally gregarious (some say pushy) person, I assume everyone in the whole wide world wants to know what I think about the books I read. *grins* I’m like the neighbor that invites you to their home for wine only to trap you and show you all 3560 slides of their vacation. When I crack open a new book, I feel like I am actually being gifted with an all-inclusive ticket that allows me to travel anywhere, to any era, and experience an adventure. Be it a romantic tryst, an epic space battle, or a small town vacation…books allow me an unimaginable freedom. I can go anywhere and be anyone for a low price.
Reviewing isn’t a chore for me. It isn’t a job. It isn’t an ego booster, popularity gimmick, or money making scheme. I don’t use my voice to settle grudges, start wars, or try to make people cry. I don’t live in an ivory tower, dispensing my unwanted advice to the masses. I don’t pick up a book and say to myself, “Hmmmm, let’s see how I can destroy someone today.” I get no pleasure from telling people the book I’m reading isn’t all that good. I want authors to succeed. I want to muppet flail on the internet and tell everyone how utterly divine the book I’m reading is. But, I can’t tell everyone that a book is fantastic and should be dipped in gold and framed for the Louvre if it’s not. I’m not here to stroke anyone’s ego. I’m not here to edit, beta, or help anyone write better with my reviews. I’m here because I enjoy reading and have a small group of other readers who trust me to tell them the truth. Just as I trust them to tell me the truth. They don’t want platitudes or fluff…they want to know what I read and if I liked it or didn’t like it and why. That’s it. There are no nefarious reasons. There is no hidden agendas. If I didn’t publish my reviews I would still read, I would still voice my opinions, and stand by them.
I enjoy reading reviews from all manners of reviewers and sites. Professional and hobbyists. Young and old. Male and female. Shy and argumentative. Since I started reviewing I have had the pleasure of meeting some truly remarkable people. From the super famous to the just starting out. I have laughed, cried, shared good and bad news with these people. I cheered their success and offered a shoulder to cry on when things went south. The appeal for me when interacting with them is that everyone’s opinions are differing and the sheer magnitude of the spectrum is fascinating. The key is that it’s all opinions and it’s important to respect everyone’s opinion. They are opinions. Thoughts. Views. A dime a dozen. One of many. A cornucopia of life experiences, attitudes, and personalities. Why would we ever want to silence that? Why would we ever want to look at a person and tell them that what they have to say doesn’t matter? Have some come to regard themselves so highly that they no longer see the truth before them? We are all a necessary cog in the wheel. Regardless of how the book is reviewed or a thought given-it is nothing more than someone’s opinion and should be taken as such. Read it, don’t read it, listen to it, don’t listen to it…but always respect and move on.
Rinse, lather, repeat.
Many blogs are choosing this week not to post any new reviews or blog at all in response to what has occurred. A long-held but invisible line has been crossed and many feel that a sacred trust has been broken. People want answers and so far, no one is talking. Maybe that’s for the best. Maybe our focus should be more on where we go from here and how to keep it from happening again. I and Mandi discussed it and felt that for us, a blackout wasn’t the best choice. We have made promises that we both felt needed to be kept. However, that doesn’t mean we don’t care about what has happened which is why we are choosing to focus on the good in the author/reviewing world and all the joy we have received being part of it. Books and reviews of books will always be a non negotiable part of the literary arena but only we can choose if it’s to be a pleasant experience or something to be played out via MadMax in the Thunderdome. We all have an accountability that must be met…and anyone who feels that they are above all that has lost more than just their minds, they have lost the very reason they started writing. You and only you are responsible for your actions and at the end of the day only you will be asked to answer for them.
So let’s push aside the anger and frustration and concentrate on the good.
Share with us the story behind why you started reviewing.
Mandi says
I’m so glad we found each other!! I don’t remember pre-Tori days ;) <3 <3
I started reviewing because I was kind of reviewing and talking books at JR Ward's message boards- but they were so strict with PG/PG13 rating, and I wanted a platform where I could talk and say whatever I wanted. At that time I was also sending weekly "Smexy Emails" to some girlfriends but none of them read romance books so the emails were kind of lost on them.
Smexy Books was born. And then Twitter. And then Tori. ;)
Tori says
*clings to Mandi*
My life started with you.
I should write for Hallmark. LOL xo
Norma says
Thank you for that great post today Tori. I’m not a blogger. I don’t even review that much. I’m better at talking than putting it into writing. But I absolutely depend on reviews. Before I read ANY book, I visit goodreads, here, DA and a few other sites. Then I ask a few friends. Then I make a decision. Sometimes I impulse buy (we all do). Do I always listen to the reviews? Of course not. Sometimes I read a review and think everyone must be nuts (I still can’t figure out who 50 Shades of Grey is a romance when CG hates women), but I digress. The point is, those of you who are reviewing are providing a service. And it’s fun. I like a straight up review. Here’s the good, here’s the bad. I also enjoy a snarky, silly review, a best of sex scenes, top 10 reasons why, etc. So to make a long story somewhat shorter, I love this site and keep on keepin on! :)
Tori says
We appreciate you too! Most people want opinions before buying, it’s instinctive. Even I wade through the jungle before purchasing and reading books. The funny thing, most often then not, the more controversy over a book and I’m more apt to buy it because I’m nosy and HAVE TO KNOW. lol
Susan says
I was going to write my own comment but Norma wrote it so well I’m just going to say “Ditto”. I don’t usually check Goodreads but the rest is spot on for me.
Jen Twimom says
*GROUP HUG* I too am focusing on the positive! Thanks so much for your great discussion posts here!
I started blogging and writing reviews in 2010 as well. I had been active on Twitter for a while and became friends with women who had blogs. At that time, my buddy Bells (Hanging with Bells) and I decided we wanted to try blogging too. We helped each other out and each started our own blogs, with great help from other women (like Mandi) who were twitter/bloggers as well.
I started with the intent NOT to review books, because “I don’t know how to write reviews.” But then I wrote a post about a book I’d just finished in what I thought were general discussion terms. I got so much positive feedback about “what a great review” it was. Suddenly the lightbulb went off, and I realized that just “talking about books” and “giving my thoughts” is a review! I don’t have to be a literary critic to write a review – people want to know my opinion.
I started working on developing my voice and finding my audience. For a long time I fretted about numbers and such, but about a year and a half ago, when I was feeling down that my numbers weren’t big enough at my little blog, I remembered that I am doing this because I LOVE TO READ AND TALK ABOUT BOOKS! I reset my thought process and go at blogging and reviewing with that as the number one priority: do it because I love it.
Thanks again for all of your support – Mandi and Tori. You guys are wonderful women and great friends. I can’t wait to see you both again some day!
Tori says
(((hugs))) Thanks for sharing, Jen.
I think most of us in general just want to talk and share our love of books. I enjoy your reviews because we have such similar taste and I love seeing you address aspects I miss.
Megan says
Tori, I love this post. Thank you. I got into reviewing in 2002 (I think), when I returned to reading romances after a LONG time away (basically, I missed the whole actual bodice-ripping/rape thing in romance). I didn’t have anyone in my real life to talk about these books with, and I was dying to find more to read, more like THIS ONE, and THAT GREAT BOOK, and I found AAR. I started reviewing for them, and realized there was a wealth of great books out there I hadn’t read, which is like telling Bacchus there’s a silo’s worth of wine waiting for him in a yonder field. I ended up at H&H through another fluke, and now I am grateful to be accepted in a community that loves romances like I do. As an author, I’m so glad to be able to listen to bloggers say what they like and don’t like in books, and hopefully learn from them. THANK YOU, Tori and Mandi, for reading and sharing the love.
Tori says
Hiya Megan. For those who don’t know, I also blog for HH and Megan is my handler (which sounds so CIA-ish & way cooler then my editor-lol ). Your love of romance is well documented and I adore reading your thoughts and insight into it. So…THANK YOU!
jamie beck says
First, what a lovely testament to your friend/co-blogger…and how wonderful that you found some sense of purpose doing what you love. That’s my most fervent hope for my kids, that they make those connections with people and work that incite their passions.
Secondly, I’ll never understand why people get so worked up over reviews. Yes, writing is personal, and any time you share your work, you’re putting yourself out there and risking rejection. Rejection never feels good. But any review (good or bad), whether it be from one of the major blog sites you’ve mentioned, or from PW, RT, etc., is just one person’s opinion. ONE person.
Just as we do not all like the same types of people (or lovers) in real life, we do not all enjoy the same types of humor, tropes, character traits, and so on we find in books. That’s okay. In fact, it’s a good thing. How boring would it all be if every book had the same voice, pace, and characters? Some like a long, slow burn. Others a quick, snarky twist. As long as the quality of the writing is decent, every book should find an audience (some bigger than others).
I think an author’s ongoing job is to strive continually to improve their craft and tell better stories with each book. Any time spent counting followers, touting stats, or obsessing over reviews is simply a distraction–time wasted instead of time invested in becoming a better writer. And antagonizing readers who’ve taken the time to read and review your book is certainly the surest way to lose not only that reader, but any of that reader’s friends, too.
Personally, I’ve always found criticism to be a great motivator and useful learning tool. If no one tells me what I’m doing wrong, I can’t grow or fix my mistakes. But maybe I just have a thick skin! ;-)
In any case, I’m hopeful that the dialogue growing from this public battle will put an end to the bullying and antagonism between some readers and authors. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Tori says
Criticism hurts. I won’t deny that. But you are right in saying a whole world of the same points of view would be boring and only you can choose what to do with any criticism you get. I would much rather have someone be honest and tell me what I need to work on then kiss my arse and tell me how special I am. :P
jamie beck says
LOL! There are days when a little arse-kissing might be nice, though, right? In any case, I rely on thoughtful reviews like those on this site, DA, RT, etc., to help me wade through the MANY options out there. I sure don’t have time to read the mass quantity of books you guys devour. It would be a huge detriment to all readers (and authors) if dedicated reviewers stop publishing opinions out of fear of retribution.
Tori says
LOL Sure. I appreciate being told I’m awesomesauce as much as the next person. The world needs authors, reviewers, and readers. We just need to find a way to peacefully co-exist.
May says
Group hug!!
And yes. Every time I pick up a book I do so fully expecting to be transported, enjoy, and then be able to share that love here. When I can’t it sucks, but I share why and try to do so in a way that doesn’t spoil for the person who the book might appeal to.
I don’t think of the author sitting and reading and wringing hands over what I might say because I write to share with my fellow book obsessed peeps.
*fist bump*
Tori says
This is why you are my West Coast twin. *high five*
Kat Black says
“concentrate on the good”
Your entire post is terrific, Tori – smart, reasoned, insightful – but to me, those last four words are key because, compared to the occasional flare up of crazy, there IS so much good to be found in the online book community. When we consider the sheer breadth and diversity of this global community, it’s amazing (and ultimately reassuring) that things don’t explode more often.
Thanks for this, and you can count me to stand among the number of the good! (but remind me never to accept an invite round to yours for slide night ;) )
Kat x
Tori says
What? You don’t want to see my 3000 plus slides on my one day trip to the Okra Festival? lol You are one of the good ones and you are most appreciated.
Pamela says
I remember when I first twitter’d with you Tori!!! It was over BDB. We started reviewing books around the same time, and it’s been love ever since. I had to stop writing reviews myself, but I’m still all up in everyone else’s business. I love talking books with you guys and getting recommendations. I feel so lucky to have been able to meet you guys and many others at Cons. I feel connected to you guys and probably always will. People who aren’t part of this community just don’t know.
Tori says
*tackle hug* I too remember when we first met. FUNTIMES!! Seeing you (online or in person) makes my day a whole lit brighter.
blodeuedd says
It was December 2008, I was bored, unemployed and spent too much time online. I can’t remember how but I came across this publisher bookblog, which led me to other bookblogs and I was all..damn! I want to do that! I want to talk about books with people who have read them. As I had no book buddies in RL. And I loved it, and I found new genres to love
Tori says
Isn’t it funny how so many reviewers say they started reviewing because they didn’t have many RL friends to discuss books with?
Helyce says
Tori, that was an excellent, well said post. I have to admit, since I went back to work my on-line presence has taken a major hit-so I first want to say that I do not have all the facts on the current drama du jour, but with the links Mandi posted yesterday and yours today, I’ll take a look over the weekend and get up to speed. I will say,that for what little I’ve read via either articles or tweets, I am appalled and quite frankly, frightened that in this day and age this is happening.
As for blogging-I do not personally have a blog, but have been grateful beyond words to be part of the Smexy Books team with Mandi, Tori, May and Sheena. I don’t remember when I came on board, but I totally remember my sheer and utter delight when after several emails back and forth about some m/m books, I received an email from Mandi where she asked, “Would you be interested in reviewing books on my blog?” I remember telling my husband in babbling and completely incoherent sentences that I couldn’t believe she’d asked me, ME…I’m a nobody. I also remember sitting at my computer to format my response to her while my heart pounded in excitement. Mandi has since become a great friend and though we are geographically miles apart and I’m old enough to be her mother, she is truly the sister of my heart.
Saying yes to Mandi was easy, writing reviews not so much. I struggle, still, today. it’s hard to write a review on a book I loved without giving everything away. In comparison, I struggle to write a review when a book is just so-so. I hate to DNF, but sometimes you just gotta. Like Tori says above, like anything else in life-some things appeal more to some people than they do others. Books are the same.
Since I’m already babbling, I’ll add that I’m also very grateful for the online friendships that have been cultivated here and for those who I have often (quite possibly) bored to tears, with my rants about a book that I’m reading. Most recently my victims have been Annie (UTC), Pamela and Jen (RHB) who have listened to me bitch and moan about my foray into the Outlander series which I stupidly started after falling in love with Jamie Fraser on TV. I didn’t listen to Jen or Pamela and am now reading book 4. I am obsessed and cannot stop.
If I could find a way to do this and make money, I would. That would make me extremely happy. I live and breath books. They are my escape from reality, a very necessary thing with two teenagers in the house. It is simply a necessary part of my life.
Tori says
Hush…you are NOT a nobody! You are our H. XOXO
Deb says
I’m not a reviewer, however, I did blog for a few years. Mostly because I was going through some heavy personal issues and needed an outlet to express the creative side I’d suppressed for too long.
I came across a new blog that posted prompts for writing flash pieces of fiction. I loved to write but never considered it anything more than fooling around. I scrounged up the courage to start posting to the prompts. The four gals who ran the blog were great fun and very encouraging. We subsequently formed on online friendship/critique group that ended up being more gabbing about books than critiquing each others work. It was through them that I was introduced to some of my now favorite authors in the genres of BDSM, M/M, and erotica, which are my favorites. We all liked slightly different styles, voices, genres but it was because of these differences that I tried new authors. We have since drifted apart but I will always cherish the time we spent sharing our thoughts and the fact that I was encouraged and supported by them.
In my opinion, good writing and a good story are worth the time to read even if it’s not in your usual repertoire of favorites.
Your blog is my favorite for honest opinions and good recs. Your reviews are as they should be – you cite examples and give reasons for your opinions. You respond to your readers and have fun!
Thanks for keeping me up to my ears in TBR’s. LOL
Tori says
I always try to read outside of my comfort zone. You always have to evolve and strike out.
Allyn Lesley says
As a soon-to-be published author, I can not thank you enough Tori and Mandi for choosing to focus on the positive. The unfortunate article has bothered me as well (I’ve even shared a post about it) and I wondered if the blogging community had a collective opinion AND response to it. So glad to have stumbled upon the Facebook page which led me here. Continue to do the tireless work you do in conjunction with authors.
Sheena says
Well said Tori! (Am I allowed to fan girl you?)
Tori says
Does it come with bacon?
Sheena says
I have always reviewed the books I loved (and loathed) for anyone who cared to hear :-) I came across smexy online a few years ago and LOVED the gals and felt like hey! These broads like some of the same shit as me! And then I noticed there was a J.R Ward section. A J.R Ward SECTION! Then I began to stalk- follow Mandi and Tori and Geezus the world of books I was opened up to…
Then one glorious morning I was invited to joint review an amazing novel and later I joined my smexy sisters officially. *cue trumpets* I LOVE being a part of this author/reviewer “relationship.” I would never abuse an author by doing a trash review for spite and in turn if I have a less than glowing review for a book, I expect the author to chin up, and not go cray town 2014 on my ass.
Dang I love this place!!
Tori says
We love you too. I <3 "broads" lolol
Ren says
I once to confess..that the first US blog that I discovered is Smexy Books. I remember that back at 2010, I falling hard for BDB and search frantically on Google for any BDB related. Then I found Smexy Books. I like Mandi voice and sense of humor and then I knew her BFF, Tori. Later I friend you both at Goodreads, and since then when I want to read something I always read your review first. Of course some books that you both loved sometimes not worked for me. But yeah, I trusted your opinion and recommendation :). Smexy Books is one of blogs that I still visit until now, even I rarely comment.
Back to reviewing..I review book when I’m first join Goodreads (at 2010 too). First, I just rate book I’d read because before joined, I read a lot of book. I’m reviewing in Indonesian, then switched to English, because I want to honed my English skill through writing. Since then, so many things happen. My grammar and structure mocked by some people that apparently didn’t like that their favorite book criticized by me while I think that I’m not too harsh and try to make it a little funny. A local publisher once accused me for black campaign while I never intend to do that. A local author flag my review because she didn’t like that I stated why people better to not read her book because her rude behaviour. Well the later maybe I deserved it..a bit. But I did it because a say author trolling my friend first :/.
I love this post Tori, because the positive vibe and I agree with you. Even mocked, attacked, and some people call me “mean” just because I’m being honest, I don’t want to stop reviewing. You right about review is not a chore, because if we think it as a chore, review will lose its fun. I review book I read because I want to share, and write negative reviews is always hard. Sadly, in my country some authors still don’t get that review is for readers not for them. Some had stated that “how if we review your review” or “if you can’t write a single book, don’t criticize my book!” smh
Sorry for the long post! Just know that I will always support Smexy Books! :)
Tori says
(((Hugs))) Ren. I love reading your reviews on goodreads. They are very insightful. The whole “those who do write, those who don’t review” is silly. We WRITE our reviews. I think of them as tiny little novellas. lolol I know a lot of reviewers who are also authors or soon to be authors.
aurian says
I’ve started blogging April 11, 2010, just as a way for myself to keep track of what I had read, and what I thought of it, and when I got a comment from the author, I was over the moon.
I like reading review blogs, often struggle writing my own reviews, especially the past few months. I hate the “scandals” some authors create and how things are often blown up out of proportion, with everyone having an opinion.
A blogger blackout seems pointless to me, as it doesn’t hurt the person involved I think.
I love to interact with other readers and bloggers and authors on blogs and social media. I have found some great friends in real life through the internet, a booksite, my best friend only lives 5 minutes away. We would never have met otherwise.
I love coming here, and read your reviews.
Tori says
That’s fantastic. I’ve met quite a few lovely peeps who live close to me I would have never even known about had I not started reviewing.
Alexa says
This is a great post and sums up everything that I’m sure most bloggers feel. I don’t have friends who read books so I wanted a place that was a place where I could share my thoughts on books, my own opinions on the things I read. I found the book blogging world through chat rooms on Barnes and Noble and I figured if so many other people could run blogs, go to school, go to work, raise children, etc that I could do this too. I started my blog over 4 years ago and I still enjoy blogging. I never try to bash an author or a book, I just speak my mind on how the book made me personally feel. If people don’t like my reviews or my style or my voice they don’t have to follow me or read what I write. To each their own.
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