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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Book Reviews 101: 10 Ways to Review a Book

 I know how intimidating it can be to write a book review--even when you're elbow deep in the industry.

The first time I volunteered to review a book for a friend was Kerri Cuevas' Deadly Kisses. Kerri and I had rubbed shoulders and exchanged laughs over our efforts with three separate Choose Your Own Adventure bloghops. I didn't want to get this wrong. And yet, when I stared at that blank text box on Amazon, I totally froze.

What?!?

I mean, I've written my whole life. How hard should it have been to say a few nice words about a book I really liked for a friend I totally adored?




Book reviews are book food. If you love a book and want it to succeed (or to see more books from the author) YOU BETTER get out there and leave them a review. Reviews boost visibility in Amazon's store. Which means they boost sales. Which means the author is motivated to put out more content.


But wait, that book already has thirty reviews. Why does it need another one?

People are lemmings, or sheep. I hate to say it, but it's true. They say, "Ooh, everyone is reading this book--see, it has two hundred reviews. I bet it's awesome."

A book cannot have too many reviews

But you really didn't like something about this book. Boo hoo. I bet there were a TON of things you did like, and good vibes always come back around. Say what you can that's positive and reward the author who put their blood, sweat, and tears into it. Don't be an author killer.

Now to the 


All of these ideas can be used separately for a simple review or a few combined for a longer one. When I review a book, I usually include one to three of these aspects.


1. THE SHORT REVIEW: If you're not confident writing a long review, don't. One sentence is sufficient. "I love this book." "I can't wait for the sequel." etc.


2. THE COVER: Did it get you? Were you intrigued by it? What questions did it have you asking?

3. THE EMOTIONAL RESPONSE: What did this book make you feel? 


4. THE HOOK: When or how did this book grab you? The end of the first chapter? The first page? The first line?


5. SETTING: How was the story world? Realistic? Beautiful? Uninspired? Strange? A place you'd like to visit? Somewhere you're glad you'll never live?


6. THE CHARACTERS: Was there a character you absolutely loved or hated? Tell us about it. (This can comprise an entire review with multiple characters.)


7. PLOT: Book reviews aren't book reports. You don't need to rehash the plot. In fact, please don't. Only summarize when you need it to expound upon a point you want to make. Was there a twist in the story that took your breath away? What was your favorite scene? Did the story move too fast, too slow? Any glaring plot holes? Did you like the way it ended?

8. ORIGINALITY: What makes this book stand out from others? 


9. STYLE: What is the author's writing style? Poetic? Filled with imagery? Abrupt? Gritty? Comical? 


10. RECOMMENDATION: Do you recommend this book, and if so, to whom? (Age and genre preference.) 

  


 And there you have it, ten approaches to writing a book review. Go, read, share the love!



Welcome to our IWSG buddies! Huge thanks to our hosts, Jenni Enzor, Jemima Pett, Jamie of Uniquely Maladjusted but Fun, and Kim Lajevardi!

The optional question this month is: What was the most inspiring feedback you received from readers, including agents, editors, and beta readers?

I'm going to skip the question but I'd love to hear what everyone has to say.


Do you leave book reviews? What techniques have you discovered to make it easy? 

61 comments:

  1. That's an excellent checklist for writing a review. Need to get you to guest post that at the IWSG site. And no, a book can never have too many reviews.

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    1. Haha! Well, if I wasn't full-timing it on homeschooling, video/promotional content writing/creation, lesson planning for an external school, and drafting, I would totally be in.

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  2. These are great tips for writing a review. That would be a great guest post, like Alex said. I don't have time for long reviews, but I try to write some short ones because I know it helps authors.

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    1. I'm with you. Short reviews are still reviews, and sometimes they're better.

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  3. Great tips! For me, emotional response is the most important.

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    1. I get that. Of course, sometimes that's the hardest part too.

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    1. Thank you! Hope there's a seed that will help in the future.

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  5. Great ideas! I tend to rate rather than review, but if a book really blew me away, I usually mention it on my blog with a line or two about why.

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    1. I love that! I used to do reviews through my newsletter, but as life got away from me, so did that aspect. Maybe one day I'll get back to it.

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  6. Fun times! LOL I actually get about ten books a month from our leading publisher to write reviews about them which are then placed directly under the book on their website where they stay forever. I try to write them as movie trailers, so less personal and more entertaining and warm and inviting, not suffocating them with emotions or philosophical opinions. I usually hate the ones on GoodReads, so many selfish loonies there who think it is all about them, not about the literature, so they praise garbage or attack just to be funny. Thankfully I do not get much garbage to review LOL

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    1. It is true. Goodreads has been the troll capital of the book review world. Do you get to read for fun too? I mean, 10 books a month is a pretty hefty load.

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    2. Most of them are my own pick, so I chose what suits me LOL It is a hefty load, especially given that I am also translating a 750 pages long dystopian fantasy romantasy LOL

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  7. I write a lot of reviews for my blog, but I still sometimes freeze up when I write one on Amazon or Goodreads. So these are great tips, thank you!

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    1. Any time! And I hear you. We all just need a little spark to get us moving sometimes, eh?

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  8. All great points. Offering an opinion about the book for the next guy that comes along can be very helpful. Honesty counts. Unique points of view count.

    Since when searching for the next read, we don't all share the same tastes. What you may feel is 'over the top' might be exactly what the next reader is looking for.

    That's why adding your review matters. :-)

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    1. It's true. I don't like crying books. I wouldn't review one favorably, but mentioning that might pull someone else in.

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  9. I review, but I do find them challenging. I've had more trouble writing them since I've been in this crazy business of writing and publishing. Maybe because I'm sensitive to how writers feel about their work. I want to be honest as well as informative and accurate, all the while communicating that this is my opinion alone. Great post today!

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    1. I get that! There's only so much brainpower to go around.

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  10. Hello Crystal, thank you so much for sharing your thoughts, dear friend.
    I don't write reviews, but at times I do give some recommendations on my blog, such as certain YouTube channels.

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    1. True. YouTube is the new blogosphere, pretty much. Or at least, that's how I see it.

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  11. I review every book I read. This is good info.

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    1. That's awesome! I used to do that -- for many, many years. I probably will again once all the kids are graduated. (We homeschool.)

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  12. Fabulous post! And more important to shout from the rooftops now that the Zon allows star ratings without requiring a review.

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  13. Good tips for writing a review! And yes, the more reviews, the better!

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  14. Book reviews are hard to write even you're honest. I like to keep them short unless I dislike the book than there would a whole of why. I think even negatives gets readers interested because what seems bad to one reader is actually good to another.

    These are good tips for writing reviews.

    Thanks for dropping by my blog. Have a lovely day.

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    1. If I don't like the book, I don't review it. Why? Because I know there are people out there who connect with the writing, it's just not me. And as I read pretty broadly, it's inevitable I won't connect with a lot of books. I hope negative reviews help, but I've read some that were...just malicious. I suppose those are the unfortunte ones.

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  15. Sounds like good tips for professional reviews. Quite frankly, when I see a review from another author, I skip it because I know it will only be positive and not give me a balanced opinion.

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    1. Haha! I get that. But honestly, an author knows better than anyone what they are looking at in a book -- all the nuts and bolts that built the structure. Believe me, if we wanted to tear a book apart -- even a really awesome book -- it wouldn't be a stretch.

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  16. I write book reviews for everything I read and post them on Goodreads. It is my way to keep track of my reading. My reviews are usually short and reflect my impressions of the book: what I liked or disliked. I don't have one recipe for all books, but I think your points are a good guideline for book reviews.

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    1. I'm with you! I actually used to share all my reviews via my newsletter and I was keeping track of my books on Goodreads. I should probably get back to that, but there are only so many hours in a day, eh?

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  17. Thank you, Crystal! This is perfect because I am way behind on writing some reviews. One thing I never want to be is an author killer! It's the elementary writing teacher in me. Generally, if I don't like a book, I won't write a review. Happy IWSG Day!

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    1. Haha! If I don't like a book, I don't finish it. I'm with you -- I don't write a review for books I despise. They aren't for me. They are for a different audience, eh?

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  18. Bad reviews are good for authors, too. Seriously. If someone trashes a book with criticisms about things others like, it's as good as a rave. Oh, the book was too gruesome? Those who like gruesome will take notice.

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    1. I get that. But an author seeks more in a book than your average reader, eh? We could see the PERFECT book and still pick it to pieces. That's why I'm talking about. We have to be careful not to let our writerly insight and bias taint something.

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  19. Those are great tips for reviews. Lots of people really don't know how to write them. Thanks for sharing these.

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    1. I know! People would come to me, face to face and tell me how much they loved my books, and I was like, "Could you leave a review?" And when I told them to write the single sentence review, they were like, "Oh yeah, I could do that!" Haha!

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  20. Great tips -- oh, I hate it when a review starts with the book blurb. I mean it's already there.

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    1. Right?! We want what you think, not a book report. =)

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  21. Great post! If anyone asks me (again) how to write a review, I'll send them here :-)

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  22. Thanks so much, Crystal. I review books often on my Wordpress site and I need all the tips I can get! LOL. :-)

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    1. It definitely makes it easy when you have a checklist of options, eh?

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  23. Writing book reviews is really hard. Tried it a few times. Sometimes I can't say anything at all and sometimes I say too much. These are really great tips and yes---a book always needs more reviews!

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    1. It definitely can be hard. I think the more you do it, the easier it becomes.

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  24. I also tell my reviewers that it doesn't have to be a book report. And plead with them not to leave spoilers. They don't always listen. lol

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    1. I hear you! But you know, people grow up with a school mentality of how you approach books. When they become a broader part of your life, I think your perspective changes.

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  25. Excellent review advice. Too bad non-authors rarely know how important reviews are to authors.

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    1. It really is too bad. I guess it's up to us to educate them? Or try, anyhow.

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  26. Good review tips! I write a lot of book reviews because I read a lot of books. Sometimes they're a line or two, other times longer because there's more to say about a specific book.

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    1. Rightly so! Good on you for adding to the community. =)

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  27. Thank you for a solid post, Crystal. Writers need reviews to help their books get noticed for sure. And more than likely, there is something positive you can say about the book you just read. Thank you!

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    1. Always! I grew up with the philosophy that if you didn't like someone, you just didn't know them well enough. The same could be said for books -- since there's an audience for everything.

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  28. When I actually have time to read, which I do my best to make time, I always leave a review. I love your 10 tips. I use quite of few of them.

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  29. Thanks for the tips I didn't review a lot of books I buy most books in second hand bookshops and not online. But I will think about this next time.

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  30. I review a lot of books but sometimes I still struggle how to start. Thanks for this!

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  31. Great tips! I'll confess that I don't leave reviews unless I truly love a book and can give 5 stars honestly, because the book world is so small, some authors are thin-skinned, and I don't want to make enemies. Yet I cannot in good conscience give an inflated review. I feel guilty about it, because once I publish something (someday...) I will want all the reviews, including the less-than-perfect ones.

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Hit me with your cheese!