"Pro authors are all over LJ, often in very participatory fashion. Does this effect how or to what degree you critique their books?"
Generally I try not to critique at all if I know the author has a blog. Some of these folks (i.e. the authors) clearly ego-Google themselves and their work constantly while claiming they don't and are masters of the passive-aggressive "link to a bad review by random stranger so my groupies friends can go hotly defend me, while I claim myself not to mind the review at all and just be happy my book's talked about" strategy, and life's too short.
"Conversely, for those of you published or working on publishing, how do you want that sort of thing handled and how do you intend to handle it on your end."
Ignore it (however praiseful or otherwise it is), and if I must comment or vent do it to a very small filter. I think there's a lot to that old theory about readers needing the freedom to discuss a work well outside the (active, known) presence of the writer.
no subject
Date: 2006-09-25 08:37 pm (UTC)Generally I try not to critique at all if I know the author has a blog. Some of these folks (i.e. the authors) clearly ego-Google themselves and their work constantly while claiming they don't and are masters of the passive-aggressive "link to a bad review by random stranger so my
groupiesfriends can go hotly defend me, while I claim myself not to mind the review at all and just be happy my book's talked about" strategy, and life's too short."Conversely, for those of you published or working on publishing, how do you want that sort of thing handled and how do you intend to handle it on your end."
Ignore it (however praiseful or otherwise it is), and if I must comment or vent do it to a very small filter. I think there's a lot to that old theory about readers needing the freedom to discuss a work well outside the (active, known) presence of the writer.