The Power of One

Jan 15, 2017 06:00


A couple of weeks ago (in other words, centuries in the past, in Internet time), someone (let’s call her Naive Non-Fiction Author) published an article on one of the big aggregator sites, saying that all self-published books were terrible, and that all self-published authors were deluded fools who write drivel in hopes of parting honest readers from their hard-earned cash.

Predictably, sparks flew.

Authors wrote responses to Naive Non-Fiction Author on Facebook and Twitter and personal blogs. Some people responded to the content of the original post. Others debated proper responses to clickbait.

Then, things got nasty.

People went on to Goodreads and Amazon and gave one-star ratings to Naive Non-Fiction Author’s books.




These one-star reviewers hadn’t read NNA’s books. They weren’t rating the content. Rather, they were expressing their discontent with the author’s public stance. And in the opinion of this self-published author, that expression stepped over the line.

I get it. Self-published authors work hard. We invest a tremendous amount of time and effort and cold, hard cash to create our books. We write books that traditional publishing can’t afford to publish because our books have niche audiences or have non-traditional characters or don’t fit into convenient genres. We forge ahead on the new frontiers of publishing, exploring new ways to communicate with our readers, building new technologies to move our industry away from outdated twentieth-century ways of doing business.

(Yeah, I know. There’s some crap published by some self-published authors and there are some self-published authors who push too hard in their own entrepreneurial interest. But I’ve got news for you: there are some traditionally published authors who screw up, too.)

My point is: I know Naive Non-Fiction Author went too far.

But down-rating her books should be off-limits.

I’ve been on the receiving end of one-star ratings. I’ve received one-star ratings when vendors’ shipping materials weren’t up to the task, and cardstock covers got bent.  I’ve received one-star ratings when a printer bound in sections of a Georgette Heyer book instead of the climax and denouement of my own novel. I’ve received scores of one-star ratings when Amazon delivered the wrong file to every one of the 6000+ people who pre-ordered a box set, even though the proper file had been uploaded to Amazon on a timely basis.

(Just to be fair, I’ve received one-star ratings on my actual writing as well. Not many of them, and not with any consistent criticism, but they’re out there.)

Those one-star ratings have an effect. They suppress future sales of the specific book in question. They block advertising for the book (because most advertisers require a minimum rating before they’ll accept ads.)  They can kill individual books and entire series.

Each of those negative effects assumes that the single star has been awarded because the book itself is terrible. Not the post office, not the printer, not a vendor’s mechanized file version software.

There’s no reason to believe that NNA’s books are terrible. Her opinions are narrow-minded. Her research is shoddy. Her excuses are flimsy.

But it’s not fair to give her books one star.

So? How about you? Have you ever given a book one star? What were the circumstances?

(I’ll lead the discussion: I’ve rated one book one-star. It was a non-fiction book on using Amazon’s algorithms to build readership of Kindle Unlimited books - and it completely overlooked Amazon’s massive change in its Kindle Unlimited structure, when it went from paying authors for an entire book read after a certain percentage had been completed to paying authors solely on the number of uniform-length “pages” were read. The one-star book was still being sold at full cost more than a year after Amazon’s transition. In that case, I also returned the book, something else I’d never done before, or since.)

Mirrored from Mindy Klasky, Author.

recent, business of writing, self-publishing, writing

Previous post Next post
Up