Saturday, January 5, 2019

Happy New Year!

It's been 4 years and 3 months (more or less) since I last posted anything to this little blog.  I really have never been consistent with it or disciplined enough to write on it regularly.  I've always been the sort of "as the mood strikes"... hence, no consistency whatsoever on anything I do, except as it pertains to work.

During these past few years I've been through multiple episodes of not being in the mood to read anything.  I found myself more and more fastidious regarding what to pick for reading so, to make the story short, until the middle of last year (2018), I was mostly "sticking" to my tested and true favorite authors rather than going out exploring offerings from authors that I am not familiar with.  One funny thing is that I continued "hoarding" ebooks, even when I know full well that more than half of the ebooks I get, I will likely never read... and I don't plan on stopping this practice  😁😁

Last year I joined a few groups on Facebook related to historical romance, Jane Austen, and specific English historical periods (Victorian, Georgian, Regency).  Through those groups I decided to venture into uncharted waters to discover new authors.  I subscribed to Kindle Unlimited as well, to further my journey.  I am happy to say that I consider the quest, a success.  Yes, I encountered many that had me puzzled (i.e., authors that don't give a fig about basic historical accuracy -- since when were there governesses in Medieval England, just to give an example of whattheeffery; typos, misspellings and grammatical errors galore -- and English is my second language so you can imagine how bad it must be in some cases; words that didn't belong -- wonton in place of wanton...yeah, that one was extra special and very funny, etc.)  Either way, the results were good enough that I decided to continue trying authors new-to-me.  I've started a running list of authors because now I am having a hard time keeping up.  I went from less than 6 favorite historical romance authors to about 15, and my memory is not what it used to be, so I do need to keep a list. I'll probably share it here, on a separate post.  I am also starting a reading journal, and for this topic, I am already in the process of writing a new post.

I am done with New Year's resolutions of any sort.  By now I know that I will never follow through.  All I accomplished on previous years was putting pressure on myself and then feeling bad because I wasn't able/willing to follow through with my resolutions. 

Regarding the future of this blog, aside from what I mentioned already, I am not going to post what I plan on doing next as now I do know better.


Goodreads and assorted thoughts on reviews

Here I am, still trying to get into Goodreads, if not for anything else, at least to keep an online catalog of my books.  I never felt particularly inclined to "friend" anyone though now I have a few people in my "friends" list.   I pretty much gave up on trying to import my whole collection of titles using Calibre, but I am going to try again.  I have well over 3500 ebooks (and I am not done yet "organizing" the collection).  I really don't feel like manually entering those that are not "recognized" by their search engines.  In short, I have been organizing the collection in my own computer using Calibre.

And now to the topic of reviews in Goodreads.  The reviews system in Goodreads reminds me too much of the system in Amazon.  Anyone can up vote or down rate a book, books that are not even out yet are either given 5-star ratings or 1-star ratings, people post as a review an actual complaint about the formatting of a book or any random thought based not on their having read the books, but rather on personal opinions based on a blurb, or a cover, or whatever.  A lot of people love Goodreads, they find it useful, they are active in the communities, etc.  I don't have enough time in the day to tend to all of my personal interests as I work full time and have a husband, so I have to admit I haven't gotten into any of the actual communities/groups, there.

All this being said, there is a further element that has been putting me off, that element is author meltdown.  A few years back, there seemingly was an increased number of author meltdowns, particularly by self-published individuals.  One of those meltdowns ended up in what has to be the most disturbing online author v. reviewer incident I've had the misfortune of witnessing in my 20 years of my being online.  I don't know what has happened to the poor reviewers that were viciously attacked in that incident, I suspect some may not even review as they used to any longer.  Other reviewers in the blogger communities had a rather nasty wake up call as well.

There are a couple posts online that are very well written and do a great job of explaining things.  My favorite can be found here.  DA has an epic thread here, though sadly, the comments thread seems to be broken.  I think every major romance-related and YA blog dedicated articles to the incident at the time.

Some people tried to "justify" the actions of the authors involved in the creation of the nasty, bullying website (which no longer exists as it originally was, by the way, as they "sanitized" it substantially with the bad backlash they received, not to mention threats of legal action against them).  The argument was that people should write "nicer" reviews, that the reviewers "brought it upon themselves" because they were rude.  The reviewers (all participant in Goodreads) were also accused of creating mobs of followers and "harassing and bullying authors in Goodreads", etc.

This is the incident that ended up making me decide that Goodreads was not for me.  A site in which you are supposed to be able to share your thoughts and opinions about books you read, civilly of course,  ending up being controlled by "special snowflake" types of authors is not the place for me.  This is also what caused my decision to stick to writing my reviews in either Amazon (yes, even after what I said above about Amazon) or here, if I ever feel the need to review anything.  I was a reviewer for years, but frankly, things have changed from how they used to be back when I still reviewed, and I don't give a fig about any author whose work I review giving me grief because he/she didn't like what I said, no matter how politely I have expressed the thoughts.  My opinion is: if you put your book out there for all the world to see, IT'S ON YOU if you end up with a review from someone that hated it.  No amount of tantrums and bullying is going to change that fact.  It has always been like that since books became mainstream centuries ago.  Even Jane Austen and Charles Dickens received horrible reviews.  My advice to those types of authors: DEAL WITH IT OR WRITE FOR YOURSELF.  If your work is good enough it will survive anything thrown at it.

Reviewing is not easy, no matter where your review is "published": a blog, a website, Goodreads, Amazon, etc.  Reviewing styles are as varied as writing styles.  Some reviewers are very blunt and unapologetic about it, others prefer to use more tact.  If a reader buys a book and gets sorely disappointed in it, and wants to share his/her opinion online, no one can tell the person not to do so and, much less, how to do so.  Period.  Again, you write a book and decide to put it out there... It's ON YOU, so deal with it and own it.  The rest of us don't owe you anything and you should be thankful that we even bothered to get your book.  I don't know when the dynamic started changing (some would blame millennials, though I know better), but it is plain wrong and does no favors to readers like me, who are constantly looking for new authors to love.