The Sword and Laser discussion
Blurbs
date
newest »


I would love for it to go away.


However, I support blurbs from publications and reviewers.
Disclaimer, when I was reviewing books, I got blurbed for Far Orbit: Speculative Space Adventures and it was one of the highlights of my book reviewing endeavor.



One book I saw back in the early 90s had the best blurbs on it. They were all things like, “‘This book is amazing and the author is so handsome!’ — author’s mom.” And “‘Buy this book, the author owes me twenty bucks.’ — author’s roommate.” I wish I’d bought the thing just for the send-up of the blurbs, because now I have no idea who that was.
I have bought many a book based on the blurbs. Before the internet there wan't much to tell you what was good or not. A positive blurb by another author I liked, or a respectable review publication was sometime as much as you got.
I bought "Lord of the Rings" in 1979 based purely on this blurb.
"The English speaking world is divided into those who have read The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings and those who are going to read them"
Sunday Times
I bought "Lord of the Rings" in 1979 based purely on this blurb.
"The English speaking world is divided into those who have read The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings and those who are going to read them"
Sunday Times

That sounds really familiar... Anyone recall what book that was?

Phil wrote: "I think I've read blurbs like that in books by people like Dave Barry or Scott Adams."
Yeah, I was going to guess Dave Barry. But he's written a few books.
Yeah, I was going to guess Dave Barry. But he's written a few books.

http://www.comicsbeat.com/graphic-nov...
Trike: Any chance you're thinking of Neil Gaiman's non-fiction overview of The Hitchhiker's Guide from the '89 or so? I think that had funny and/or fake blurbs.

That said, I think the practice was more collegial and informal back when a decent midlist author could make a living writing full-time just by putting out one novel every year or two, and the number of writers was kept relatively small by the gatekeeping of the big publishers.
Now there are thousands of authors publishing on a dozen platforms, churning out novels, novellas, and short stories for traditional publishers, digital-only publishers, on self-publishing platforms, on top of all the self-promotion and social media they have to do because their publishers only do that for their already best-selling authors, while also holding down one or two day jobs. I can completely understand why blurbing would feel onerous and wasteful under those conditions.
So do blurbs even matter? If an author you like blurbs a book, are you more likely to buy it? Do you read blurbs at all when you browse books?
And any authors here, do blurb requests take up as much time as Lee claims? I'm genuinely curious if your experiences are similar to her's.