Sentences with phrase «few reader reviews»

Not exact matches

The book does not officially release until April 14, but a few advance review copies (ARCs) have made it into readers» hands, and you can follow their responses on social media using #SearchingForSunday:
For the edification of the readers of what used to call itself a family newspaper, Ben Brantley a few days earlier reviewed «The Opposite Sex Is Neither,» a play in which Kate Bornstein is the sole performer.
... wow, lot's of mis - statements here by people speculating about the Bible and Jesus, including those of you who think the books of the Bible were written a few hundred years ago (Moses penned it around 1400BC)... the Bible is a collection of the most investigated writings of all time, so there is a tremendous amount of credible archeological and scientific material in this world available for review rooted in verifiable investigations... my response, read the Bible, do your own investigation, determine the Truth for yourself... hopefully, anne rice's denouncement of faith in the God of the Bible (it's difficult for me to believe she ever had Saving Faith in the first place) will bring some readers to investigate and find the Truth... God will call the Elect, not one more, not one less...
On my cloth diaper blog I have posted a few reviews that people submitted to me and amazingly enough both owners of gdiapers have posted useful comments on the blog to help my readers understand these products a bit better.
I read a few advanced reader copies that come out later this month, so I'll have a book review up in a few weeks!
When we featured the dress several months ago, there were only a few colors available, but the reader who'd written us to recommend it liked it so much she'd bought all of them — it's great to see that it now comes in 6 colors and has 75 glowing reviews at Nordstrom, where it's available in sizes 2 - 16.
She graciously sent me a few items to review and to give you guys an exclusive deal for all Southern Beauty Guide Readers.
I've seen a few 6/6.5 out of 10 and 3/3.5 out of 5, plus a lot of reader reviews at GameFAQs have been very disappointed, giving it 3/10 in cases.
Few Education Next readers will arrive innocently at this review: the coverage of Dale Russakoff's wonderfully written The Prize, an account of recent education policy in Newark, has been extensive.
Just a few reviews with 4 + stars can be all it takes to start pulling in new readers!
Readers may forgive a few errors, but when there are mistakes on every page, readers may leave bad reviews and never pick up your booksReaders may forgive a few errors, but when there are mistakes on every page, readers may leave bad reviews and never pick up your booksreaders may leave bad reviews and never pick up your books again.
I have reviewed almost every single e-reader ever made, even fringe ones from China, Europe, South Korea, and Russia Initially there was only a few hundreds readers a month that checked out our original content and today we have over a million who read our articles.
Others simply refuse to subscribe to popular tastes; these readers sample at least a few pages of just about everything, scrutinize reviews, and share their opinions with others.
I will say, however, that readers in general are more vocal than they used to be (mostly because there are now platforms for their reviews where there weren't before), and every author gets a few one - or two - star reviews.
I'm not sure I necessarily believe this — I think it's more that people are seeing something that's common with books that become more popular: with most titles, you'll see fewer rave 5 - star reviews once reviewers have no connection, however loose, to you (i.e. friends of friends, readers of a blog where you were interviewed, acquaintances from Twitter, etc.).
I figured a few hundred readers would find my books, mainly during free or discount promos, and some of them would eventually get around to reading and maybe even reviewing them.
They have resulted in quite a few reviews for my books from readers who truly enjoy my style and genre.
It's far better to get critique from a few beta readers than to receive negative reviews on Amazon.
Reviews have almost completely been gamed; a casual reader has few reliable indicators that tell them whether a review is an honest one or not.
And that the readers who are burned by a bad self published book (despite resources like reviews & Goodreads)-- and suddenly seek out only trad pubbed books — are so few as to be negligible.
And whenever I launch a new book, I get a review avalanche from my current readers and all I have to do is send them a few emails.
Either by asking friends, or «gifting» Kindle copies to my blog readers or even paying for a few «honest reviews».
With its claims that it was a reader - centric site and not a site for authors — coupled with the admittedly bad behavior of a few authors — Amazon - owned Goodreads became a no man's land of review traffic for a while.
Until then, we're serving up a few tantalizing quotes from some June BookPage reviews to you Book Case readers.
A few of their key selling points are; Guaranteed book reviews with Readers» Favorite and Story Cartel, Promotion through PR Newswire, Author Marketing Club, and WriterCube, and an Exclusive guide: Ultimate Social Media Marketing for Authors.
A few weeks ago, I posted about reviews and their impact on ratings and readers.
Not Enough Reviews: With all of the books out there being discounted, most serious readers aren't interested in downloading a book that has only a few rReviews: With all of the books out there being discounted, most serious readers aren't interested in downloading a book that has only a few reviewsreviews.
-- a spectacular book (professionally edited, formatted, designed, proofed)-- reviews (minimum 25) within the first few weeks — beta or ARC readers before you release — an optimized website (professional graphics, social media icons, key wording, HTML, CSS for faster loading, etc...
With over 4500 new books entering the marketplace every day, it is a challenge for any author to find readers — and to find readers who will write a few sentences of honest review and post it on Amazon and Goodreads and other sites.
Luckily it has a fiery title and an awesome review (but few readers are going to slow down enough to read it.)
Very few people ever leave a review for a book, maybe one in every 200 readers.
1) Sales & Downloads 2) Increase in Sales Rank and further visibility 3) Some of our readers will buy your other books, if they like your book 4) A few of our readers will review your book, if they like your book 5) Word of Mouth - our readers will tell their friends and family about your book, if they like your book.
Over the course of the review, we extensively document; Bookvisor, eBook Reader, Kindle, Legimi and a few others!
Instead, share - worthy reviews promise readers an emotional journey or a surprising revelation — using only a few words (similar to great query letters).
If you are a wise author, you would find a few books similar to yours and look at the reviews to see what readers are saying.
A few rotten reviews are expected with every book, as a book is so subjective to each reader, and it gives your book more credibility.
There are a few ways to get reviewed: organically from readers, purchased reviews (I don't recommend), and through giveaways.
But as the reader reviews came in, which were mostly 5 and a few 4 - star reviews, a wise person assured me that potential buyers were going to pay more attention to the bulk of the reader reviews than that one, single, bad review!
The author is paying money in order to promote their book — and they may as well throw that money down the drain if they're paying for their book to be promoted on blogs that have few readers or reviewed by bloggers who don't like their book.
I love Amazon for the reader reviews; I spend a lot of time there, reading the reviews of bestsellers, and of books which sell few copies too.
I've picked up a couple awesome reader reviews over the last few days.
All the reader has to do is jump onto Amazon, leave a five - star review and say a few kind words about the book.
It takes only a few minutes to upload your manuscript have it reviewed for possible publication and readers will get the deciding vote.
Here are a few key points to consider, Alesia: Reviews from Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, etc. aren't reader reviews, they're editorial rReviews from Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, etc. aren't reader reviews, they're editorial rreviews, they're editorial reviewsreviews.
Delay your announcement — but just a little: Once you've verified that your book is available on Amazon, let a few reviews from your «inner circle» of readers accumulate before you announce its release to the public at large.
Smartphones, laptops, cameras, cars, smart thermostats, appliances, headphones, televisions, speakers, monitors, drones, tablets, 3D printers, ebook readers, video games, fitness bands... These are just a few of our major review categories, and we're adding more every year as tech evolves.
For actual readers, it's much more important to have a few good reviews and some good editorial reviews from well known authors.
Very few of the readers will put their name to slating your book for that reason (Wendig may be right, that might be behind some of the 1 star reviews that don't even mention homosexuality).
I've talked with a number of other readers recently who feel as overwhelmed as I do by the numbers and who, like me, are overlooking titles without no or few reviews in favor of those with a number of reviews.
The pros will continue to put up quality work, with great covers and enticing back cover blurbs and well edited sampling so that readers will find new authors the same as they always have; having heard about an author from a friend or seeing them mention in a blopg or on a writers site or panel, maybe an online review, They'll «pick up» the book that looks attractive and interesting, check out the description and maybe reading the first few pages.
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