Jay
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
How do you approach writing book reviews? I often have a lot to say about a book while I'm reading and reacting to it, but trouble finding the heart of how I felt about it in a short review. I enjoy reading your Goodreads reviews and those of Patrick Rothfuss a lot, and respect your taste. Any advice for those of us who read a lot, but could stand to recommend more?
Lois McMaster Bujold
I consider my little reviews to be my personal informal reader responses, and don't set a particularly high bar for myself. I try to capture how I reacted and why without putting in too many spoilers, and offer something of what I see as the mode or mood of the book for others considering reading it, but really, they're on their own. The accumulation here on Goodreads acts as much as a reading diary for me as anything else, so I can look back and find, "What the heck was the title/author/what that book was about that I was reading last year...?"
It's interesting, looking back over a long enough baseline, to see which books were memorable, and which have settled into the sludge at the bottom of my memory and dissolved.
Ta, L.
It's interesting, looking back over a long enough baseline, to see which books were memorable, and which have settled into the sludge at the bottom of my memory and dissolved.
Ta, L.
More Answered Questions
Djkvty
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
Dear Lois, my wife and I were listening to A Civil Campaign again and just wanted to thank you (and Grover) for giving us an additional family to care about for these 2+ decades. In the mid-90's I mailed my collection of Miles books to my not-yet wife to cheer her up and within a year, we were married. She says introducing her to the VorKosigan's sealed the deal. Thanks so very much. Sorry this isn't a ? :)
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