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carol.
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Help me understand the description of this book amazon is flogging:
"Lyrical, imaginative, and wholly original, this New York Times bestseller with 8 starred reviews is not to be missed. (redacted)’s award-winning debut..."
— Oct 16, 2023 07:33AM
"Lyrical, imaginative, and wholly original, this New York Times bestseller with 8 starred reviews is not to be missed. (redacted)’s award-winning debut..."
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I believe they mean "starred reviews in national news organs of some repute," not the unprofessional but oh-so-good reviews one reads for free over here.An aside: Since nearly every book published falls into either the 'hard hitting and unforgettable' camp or the 'lyricial and imaginative' camp, how original can it be?
You are probably onto something with the 'starred reviews in national news of some repute' because it appears--to my surprise--there are thousands of GR reviews for this book.
For a moment I thought they meant reviews of 8 stars and I was thinking "who uses 8 stars as their rating system?!"
lol i looked it up and it's seraphina. it's decent. one of her ya fantasy novels is very good though - tess of the road.
Morphing_kashi wrote: "For a moment I thought they meant reviews of 8 stars and I was thinking "who uses 8 stars as their rating system?!""It's a blurb that makes no sense. Written by a non-writer, apparently.
l wrote: "lol i looked it up and it's seraphina. it's decent. one of her ya fantasy novels is very good though - tess of the road."From the blurb, I was honestly expecting some hack job. Imagine my surprise when I saw the book had like 38k reviews or something! I think marketers and book-jacket writers should actually know how to write. I think they must be graphic design or business school majors and only write in bullet points.


(No idea, really, but these empty praise blurbs/reviews are all like that.)