Anyone else get spam emails, asking you to sign up to book clubs or agencies? > Likes and Comments

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message 1: by Aaron (new)

Aaron Gehrig I get about a dozen or so a week. They lure you in with compliments on your book, then once you start talking to them they hit you up with "It will cost this much$$$"
I also get emails from so called book agents, last week I called one out because I actually contacted the literary agency they said they were emailing from. The agent there assured me it was not her, and she took steps to shut them down.
It's frustrating.
Is this a common problem?


message 2: by Gina (new)

Gina LoBiondo Yeah, I keep getting the "book marketers" wanting to promote my books to "10,000 reviewers" or some book club in the UK. They send them to my 3 emails and I just keep deleting them. So tired of this nonsense! I don't even respond anymore!


message 3: by Roscoe (new)

Roscoe Every Single Day


message 4: by Kya (new)

Kya Scammers are so annoying 😣


message 5: by Diane (new)

Diane Johnson Constantly. I ignore/delete/block most of them, but I occasionally engage in taunts and ridicule if I’m bored. Like when they think I need help promoting my book My Heart is a Chainsaw (by Stephen Graham Jones). Or when my contribution to an anthology is groundbreaking work (it’s one haiku). Or when the book they heap praise on is for a different author with the same name (sometimes spelled wildly different).

It’s crazy how belligerent I can get, and their bot farms still follow up as if they have a chance. It’s insane.


message 6: by James (new)

James Field Ha! I get those too — apparently I’m 'this' close to becoming the next international bestseller… just as soon as I hand over my life savings 😂.


message 7: by Soren (new)

Soren Blackwood Hi everyone,
I do get those almost everyday. The technique is the same, so they are easy to detect. The flattery, the lure, then the catch. Beware of those, they are very clever and sometimes convincing. I just delete the email without bothering to investigate. There are better ways to do it yourself.
Thanks for sharing such an important topic.


message 8: by Kim (new)

Kim Bock I closed my website because of it. I almost got scammed twice because Ai makes it so easy for them to sound knowledgeable. After that I just keep reporting them as spam and block them. Every time I publish a new book it's like a swarm of mosquitoes smelling fresh blood. Tedious, irritating and just plain infuriating.


message 9: by Anthony (new)

Anthony Lewis Every day. Most that are from Gmail can be deleted. Those that aren't from a Gmail address, research them thoroughly before responding


message 10: by Ban (new)

Ban anas Yes! Definitely get messages and spams…


message 11: by Richard (new)

Richard McCann And most of them are scams and a total waste of money!


message 12: by Fiza (new)

Fiza Pathan It happens to me all the time. Practically thrice in a day since 2023. I have never given into them, I am quite tech-savvy, AI savvy & have got a lawyer's brain because I've been raised by a professional criminal lawyer & a hard core banker, so I have been living in that 'court room & law & banking' atmosphere for 36 years of my life.

Since 2012 I've been getting these spam emails & phone calls, but I have NEVER given them a hearing.

But the problem has worsened since the pandemic. They get our details from Goodreads, Fable, Storygraph, BookTok etc., & then spam us when they know we need more reviews. Other book review sites that we are on also sell our information to these AI spammers willingly & some unknowingly, it is easy to do so.

Most of these spammers are AI spammers, don't give into them - they are just robots disguised as people to cheat & get your email & bank details. AI reads all our daily information especially on GR & then the various AI contact us to spam us. Especially when they know we need readers or reviews for our books.

Please be alert. Don't be so hasty for reviews, Rely on humans only - fellow indie-authors, real human readers & other certified HUMAN book professionals who can be vouched for on LinkedIn. If they are not on LinkedIn, They don't exist, period.

Remember that. :)


message 13: by W.C. (new)

W.C. Clinton A torrent of them lately. I feel like I must have hit some algorithmic threshold.


message 14: by Dr. (new)

Dr. Jasmine Fiza wrote: "It happens to me all the time. Practically thrice in a day since 2023. I have never given into them, I am quite tech-savvy, AI savvy & have got a lawyer's brain because I've been raised by a profes..."

Thank you, Fiza- great advice :)

Jasmine


message 15: by Georgina (new)

Georgina Yes, I had some really interesting ones but when I asked for the website and price details, one had a website but most did not then reply. Seems to have stopped now.


message 16: by Sophia (last edited Nov 29, 2025 06:30AM) (new)

Sophia Zane I just throw them to spam. Book clubs won't email you to spotlight their book. Always look at the email address. If its an agency it will have a professional address. Agents never ask for money upfront. They make money when your book sells.


message 17: by Fiza (new)

Fiza Pathan Dr. wrote: "Fiza wrote: "It happens to me all the time. Practically thrice in a day since 2023. I have never given into them, I am quite tech-savvy, AI savvy & have got a lawyer's brain because I've been raise..."

Most welcome Dr. Jasmine. :)


message 18: by Laurence (new)

Laurence Yep ... I get these often. At first I was flattered. I mean hey, I'm getting noticed. Then the scams started. If I'm bored (rarely) I'll need with them to waste their time so they're not preying on someone else.
More often than not I'll trash and block the email address


message 19: by Fiza (new)

Fiza Pathan Sadly Teen or young adult indie-writers here on GR get bullied easily by these scammers & then lose a lot of money. It is sad, I know many such stories post the pandemic. :(


message 20: by Monica (new)

Monica Broussard Yes. They drive me crazy. I block, block, block. But they seem to just multiply.


message 21: by Diane (new)

Diane Johnson The newest attempt that I've been seeing right here on Goodreads is a fresh five star rating for one of your books (no review) and a friend request. DON'T ACCEPT. If you don't accept, the friend request--and the glowing rating--disappear in a matter of days. Total fishing is what that is.


message 22: by Andrew (new)

Andrew Drasen Yup. I’ve had several. I had one who wanted me to login to a d2d account they created under an email they created for me and put my info in. When I asked why I couldn’t create one under my email, they said that there were some things to configure on their end yet. Either trying to steal my account information or copyright information. Either way, no bueno. This was much before launch (now a couple days away), but one of the many attempts. Emails all the time. Instagram is a trove for them. They’ll always try to find a way. If it don’t smell right, run the other way!


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