Conversations With Kav – Bits and Bobs

It’s finally cool enough to light a fire so, gather ’round and toast your tootsies and let’s participate in a Bits and Bobs Bookish Chat. That’s a fancy way of saying I don’t have a themed conversation planned for today. πŸ™‚ So, we’re going to bounce around topics and you can jump in with some of your own too. I’ll provide the refreshments (hot cocoa and ginger thins (kafferep) from IKEA. Yum!) Let’s get started!

I mentioned this event a couple of weeks ago and it’s now in full swing. A ton of indie authors have banned together to host the event and I believe there will be giveaway announcements in the latter part of the month. I’ve discovered a bunch of new-to-me authors through the list I’ll share below and I’ve purchased a few books and will be sharing them in giveaways the rest of the month. I got a nice mix of historical, contemporary rom/com and suspense and I stuck with a holiday theme because that’s what I’m in the mood for. I’m really pleased with what I’ve read so far. Here’s a link (thank you, Paula) to a list of their genres and authors/titles. Very clever categories. They’ve put a lot of thought into it.https://subscribepage.io/bellpepper?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=check_out_this_bell_pepper_romance_event_going_on&utm_term=2024-11-01

Also, if you do a search for #Bell Pepper Romance, you’ll find links to blogs, instagram posts and You Tube videos.

And speaking of hashtags — I need help with some of the technicalities of posting reviews online and I’m sure there are some techno wizards in our midst who can help. Pretty please. πŸ™‚

First — Amazon: Lately I’ve been getting notifications from Amazon requesting that I edit and resubmit my reviews because of questionable content such as profanity, harassment, hate speech, sexual content, illegal activity and private information! I’m totally gobsmacked — especially since the exact same review will be approved and published on the Canadian Amazon site. But the US site is giving me fits. It happens with maybe one out of five reviews. I change a few words and resubmit my review and it’s usually approved. A few just seem to be stuck in limbo though and never get posted. It wouldn’t bother me that much except that Net Galley expects reviews to be posted on various online sites, so it is kinda a big deal if I want to keep getting audio books from them. So, has this been happening to anyone else? I’m hoping it’s just some flukey algorithm glitch and not a targeted attack on little old me. Bwahahaha! Any suggestions on what I can do to sort this problem out?

And then there’s Net Galley. I’m pretty comfortable posting reviews and links on their site but there’s one area I keep leaving blank because I don’t know what to put. Of course, I can’t remember exactly what it looks like or what it’s called, but it’s on the second page after you click the boxes about whether you’d buy the book, recommend the book etc. It’s something about putting in descriptors to help other reviewers search? Do they mean tags like Historical Fiction or the author’s name or Christian Fiction? Do you add anything in that field? I’ve still been getting books to review even though I’ve been leaving it blank.

Oh — and do you have a shelf dedicated to Net Galley on Good Reads? I had one request from an independent author to do that and I couldn’t figure out why I thought the shelves we create were for our own use and I can’t fathom why I’d want a list of books I received from Net Galley.

And then, when you post reviews on instagram or other social media, do you tag the author and publisher? Like @theauthor ? Is that good digital etiquette or is it a nuisance? Expected or not? Inquiring minds want to know. πŸ™‚

And can someone explain how to use hashtags properly? I haven’t used them at all because, I dunno, they seem so random and my little librarian brain can’t compute. Like what earthly good would #bookboyfriends be to anyone? But I can see how #bellpepperromance works successfully in a search because it’s more specific. But I see posts with so many random hashtags at the end that it’s just confusing.

Okay — that’s enough questions from me today. I’d sure appreciate some feedback, though, from you more sophisticated, got-it-all-together reviewer types. πŸ™‚

39 thoughts on “Conversations With Kav – Bits and Bobs”

  1. Hmm, great questions! I don’t have an Amazon account anymore, so can’t really help there, but they were giving me trouble like that with my reviews a while back when I did have one.

    I do happen to have a NetGalley shelf, but it’s more for me and keeping up with where I find and receive different books than anything, and so I remember to review them on that site when I finished it.

    As for the hash tags, some are descriptive and some as you mentioned are more general. It really just depends on the person on IG and I think on other sites too, but I really only use them on IG.

    And on the NG thing, I tend to leave it blank too, but always thought it was for terms like found family, sweet/cozy romance, small town, friends to more, etc. type describing words and tropes or themes that might catch a readers attention if that’s their preferred kind of story? I’m really not sure either, but that’s how I always seemed to understand it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Interesting that you had issues with Amazon too. They don’t seem to make it easy for authors or reviewers — especially indie authors if this nonsense continues.

      I know I don’t use Good Reads to its full potential as far as tags and shelves etc go. It just seems so daunting to go back and try to fix things. Plus, it drives me crazy when GR says I didn’t read a book when I actually have but in a different format. You’d think once you stuck it on a shelf or reviewed it the info would merge and it would recognize that the book has been read. Gah!

      Yay, good to know I’m not the only one leaving that space blank on NG. Your reasoning makes sense but the librarian in me wants the official subject heading and have everyone use the same one so it’s easiy to search. lol So I end up waffling about what to put there.

      Thanks for starting off the conversation! Happy Reading!

      Liked by 2 people

  2. I read so many complaints about amazon from authors. I really feel for them because some count on the money from there book sales. I don’t think anyone in the States knows what going on with amazon. Some think they are already using AI for a lot of stuff here in the states. Sorry I couldn’t of been more help. I don’t buy anything from amazon so I can’t post reviews there but I do on Goodreads, Barnes and Noble, Bookbub just to name a few. It does help the authors even on these sites.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, and especially tough on indie authors, I think. Being Canadian, I don’t have an account with Barnes and Nobel — our equivalent would be Indigo but they make posting reviews so tedious I gave up. A while ago they had a major cyber attack issue and so they put in more steps to post a review for safety measures I guess. Good for you to post reviews where you can because it really does help authors and boost sales and popularity. Happy Reading, Kim!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. On the subject of amazon and their reviews- Over the past few months I have been getting the same type of rejection emails as you have. I don’t for a minute think a living person has actually read the review, but robots, bots for short, randomly kick out a review and send an email. Case in point, I have submitted the exact same review a second time and had it go through. Other times I change a few words and resubmit. I had one review they kicked out twice, so the third time I took out the disclaimer about receiving an early copy and all thoughts and opinions are my own. That did the trick. So, I have a feeling the bots are scanning for the words ARC, early or review copies in the text. Just my own guess from this experience. This makes it hard to complete the publishers request to do that, but I felt it was more important for the review to get through than the disclaimer. It can be a huge pain to have to resubmit and honestly the more it happens the less I enjoy reviewing. As we discussed previously, with the merging of Bethany and Revell, I’m getting a lot fewer books to review, so this problem is kind of sorting itself out.

    On the topic of Net Galley-I don’t put anything additional for descriptors, I’m not even sure I’ve noticed it, lol. Which leads to the topic of having a Net Galley shelf on Goodreads. I don’t have one for Net Galley specifically, never knew anyone did. I don’t utilize specific shelves much. Mainly for read, unread, best of 2024, that type of thing. Of course, I’m not a blogger so no one sees my reviews except any friends on there, or friends of friends maybe.

    On the subject of hashtags- I never caught on to the using them, just not my thing, but to my understanding the purpose is in case someone is doing a search for specific type of book or subject with that hashtag anyone using that in their review will come up. But it seems repetitive to me, I’m just not that into “popular” things like that. I have to prioritize my brainpower to the most important things and “hashtag” doesn’t make the list, haha.

    I’m going to go check out that Bell Pepper link and see what’s going on with that. I’ll admit I’m hesitant, 98% of my reading is Christian fiction. I find the further I stray from that the further I get from a storyline with underlying inspirational message. Some are good, some fall flat, that’s why I count on recommendations from fellow reviewers and bloggers for honest reviews.

    Have a great Sunday Best Reads followers and our leader extraordinaire Kav!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Well, I guess I’m glad to know I’m in good company with the whole Amazon thing. Bots make sense…well, they don’t actually make sense because they keep dissing my reviews, but you know what I mean. Lots of times the rejected review isn’t even a Net Galley audio ARC so…mind you my disclaimer is subtle — I just say My thanks to the author/publisher for providing me with a gift copy of this book. Gets the point across since everyone can read between the lines but keeps the bots at bay…at least on that score. I actually got three reviews in a row rejected and a threatening email saying if I didn’t adhere to their guidelines they would ban my account! Yikes!

      I’m so glad I’m not the only one skipping that descriptor field on Net Galley. πŸ™‚ You know, I’d never noticed anyone having a Net Galley shelf either but in the summer I had the request from an indie author to make sure and add the book to my Net Galley shelf and I couldn’t figure out why that would be important. I mean, I don’t go on GR looking to browse people’s NG shelves! That’s a really backward way of looking for a book…not sure I’d even know how to check. Anyway, I didn’t do it and then I didn’t get approved for the next book in the series and I wonder if that’s why.

      Tracey, we are kindred hashtag spirits! I think they are a chaotic mess most of the time, though, looking up the Bell Pepper Romance event that way worked well. So, good for specific cases, I guess. And speaking of Bell Pepper Romance — the books are a wide spectrum of ‘clean’ and ‘closed door’. Some go way too far in my opinion to meet my idea of the criteria. BUT it does include Christian Fiction as well. There are some authors involved in this event — some I knew about and some I didn’t. I’m on a reading adventure this month, hoping to find some great new CF authors to add to my ‘must read’ list!

      Happy Reading, Tracey! Thanks for chiming in.

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  4. I do have a shelf labeled NetGalley because some books I only have on Netgalley. I have over 100 shelves!
    I looked on my feedback given on Netgalley and I don’t have a page after Opinions. Could it be that I am only a reviewer?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I tried checking Net Galley to see what that field was actually called, but it doesn’t show up when I went in to edit a review to check it out. I’ll be submitting one this week so I’ll pay attention and write down what it says exactly. Also…might be because I only review audio books? Maybe it’s just specific to them? Which would be strange but possible. Happy Reading, Paula!

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      1. hashtags: I just do simple ones like the name of the book and the author. But I forget sometimes.
        I don’t maneuver in Instagram very well but I try to tag the authors.

        Liked by 1 person

  5. I checked out the Bell Pepper Romance page and see a lot of names to investigate. I also see some names I have read and can recommend.

    P. Creeden’s book Cecil’s Christmas Mail Order Bride, this is the first of 5 in the series and 5 star. (available on audio Kav) The other four were also good Simon, Felix, Bernard and Edwin.

    Sarah Lamb’s A Sleigh Ride for Charlotte (.99 audio Kav) there are a lot of books in this series by various authors, I’ve read 7 of the 17, all were good except one I didn’t connect with.

    Savannah Scott- A Not So Fictional Fall and He’s So Not My Valentine

    The Hart of Christmas by Latisha Sexton, hilarious!

    Melissa McClone, I haven’t read the one mentioned, but I have read Sweet Yuletide and it was good.

    That’s all the bookish news for now, must get ready for church! πŸ™‚

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Eeeeeppp!!!! TRACEY!!!! Eeeeeepppp!!!! I’m in a discombobulated state of bibliophile euphoria! Taking a deep breath, calming my racing heart and….So, P. Creeden. At first I was sad because the book you mentioned isn’t available in Canada but then I checked out her name on audible and she has a slew of Christmas stories…like A LOT — and all at really, really good prices. Woohoo! A Sleigh Ride for Charlotte isn’t on sale here, but it’s still at good price so that’s on my wish list now.

      I have read both of those Savannah Scott books, but you’re reminding me I need to look for more.

      There’s also a ton of Melissa McClone’s books on audible at great prices so I added a bunch of them to my wishlist.

      You’re the second person to tell me The Hart of Christmas is really good, and that, thankfully is available in paperback here so….tada. Now, if I just don’t sleep until Christmas I might get all these books read!

      THANK YOU, TRACEY — Happy Reading!

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      1. That’s so great you discovered a bunch of audio books for some of these authors. As you said, some of the authors in the Bell Pepper promo are CF authors, P Creeden, Sarah Lamb and Latisha Sexton. Others are clean reads, I think Savannah Scott and Melissa McClone would fall into that category, I don’t remember anything objectionable.

        I found P Creeden when I was exploring KU and various series, I’ve read 13 of her books according to Goodreads, she’s a good solid writer.

        If you find any good ones pass the info along. Happy reading, love your Eeeepppping! πŸ™‚

        Liked by 1 person

  6. At times, I have had problems with posting to Amazon. Like you did, I just change a word or two (which is often hard because I can’t fathom what word they were opposed to) and it immediately goes through. I find it better to erase the whole review and the paste it back up with the changes helps too. For me, this event seems to run in bits ever so often. So I consider it a glitch in the system that’s irritating, but we have to muddle through it. They sure don’t make it easy on a person especially when our reviews are apt to help sell their books.

    I don’t do Net Galley so can’t help you there.

    I don’t tag the author or publisher in the actual review. However, I always share my review on social media like Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest (not on Instagram). When I share it, I always tag the author (as in @authorname) when I state the title of the book by author’s name at the begin of the share. It’s a way of letting them know (faster than the review itself) that you read the book and your desire to share it with the world.

    When I post both the review and my share, I use hashtags # because it’s a way that people often search for a book, author or type of book. As an example, when I reviewed DEADLY CRUSH by Maddie Day, at the end of the review I had the following hashtags. #DeadlyCrushΒ (name of the book) #CeceBartonMystery (name of the series)Β  #MaddieDayΒ  (author name) #cozymystery (type of book).

    2clowns at arkansas dot net

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Phew! I’m relieved this has been happening to other people too. Maybe my turn to be picked on by the Amazon bots will be over soon. πŸ™‚ Tagging the author at the beginning of a social media post is a good idea. I might have to try that. Ooooh, I love Maddie Day! I haven’t tried her Cece Barton series yet and I like your examples of how you use hashtags — very helpful. Thanks so much, Kay. Happy Reading!

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  7. To my knowledge I haven’t had reviews denied on Amazon. I usually post ‘thank you to the author for the opportunity to read this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.’ I do have a Net Galley shelf on Goodreads, although I don’t use it anymore. I used to to help me keep up with where I was getting books from. I do use some hashtags on Instagram, if I am unsure of what to use I will go to the authors page and see what they have used for their books.

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  8. Good topics! As for Amazon, I quit having so many issues once I found a good solid disclaimer which also tells how I obtained the book. Amazon works pretty well except when I don’t make a $50 or more purchase on my account every 6 months (even though my account is tied to my hubby’s account and he orders a LOT). I have my own log in, so I do think that they expect me to make those purchases.

    I’m not good with hashtags and I don’t have IG, so there’s that. Facebook is really my only social media but it seems like Goodreads could be considered book social media? Not sure about that either. I think we could have a whole other discussion about Goodreads later on. I sure wish that my Goodreads feed was ONLY Christian fiction, but it’s gotten cluttered up pretty badly with lots of mainstream fiction and very sparse Christian content. Very disappointing! 

    NetGalley does have its own shelf on my Goodreads but it’s really only for me to know where a book is located for me personally. I don’t recall being asked to have a shelf. I’m still trying to make my way in NetGalley and I’m seldom able to get their books anyway. I have no idea what they want for descriptions! 

    I’m still not getting the bell pepper thing so I’ll move on and stick with strictly Christian Fiction, which I really love anyway.

    Enough rambling but I do enjoy the discussions!

    perrianne (DOT) askew (AT) me (DOT) com

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I have so many questions about Good Reads! Definitely a great idea to talk about that some day. I hear you about the books that show up on your GR feed. I know it’s based on who you friend or follow. I had to unfriend one person because I kept getting spicy books with explicit covers. She had a variety of reading interests that spanned from sweet and clean romances to very, very VERY spicy and I guess she was on an spicy binge.

      The Bell Pepper Romance event is a neat idea but I’ve discovered that there’s such a difference of opinion over what constitutes clean and closed door that it can be a bit misleading so definitely a good idea to preview writing styles on Amazon (that was a great tip from Tracey a few weeks ago which I’d never thought of doing since I don’t read ebooks.) There are Christian Fiction authors involved in the Bell Pepper event but there are also authors that lean towards lots of innuendo and steamier make out scenes before the door is close so, I’m checking reading samples and reviews before I try a new-to-me author.

      Happy Reading, Perrianne!

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  9. Probably about seven years ago I started doing quite a bit of reviewing through NetGalley, predominately Christian fiction plus some history and clean historical fiction. Posted on Barnes and Noble, Amazon, Christianbookscom, and Goodreads. Occasionally had a very few issues even then with Amazon. I was just a reviewer and not a blogger. One publisher began sending me books directly, asking if I would be interested in reading. I never did hashtags nor additional adjectives for book descriptions. Eventually, and with some health issues, it started to become less enjoyable (and more like work/chore), so I am not active on NetGalley now. I occasionally still do a review for a book I purchased or borrowed that really was exceptional. Also, I suppose the bell pepper characterization is cute, but if I were not a member of this group, I wouldn’t have a clue as to what that really meant. Is the marketing ploy going to generate more interest or confuse busy people looking for clean books? Granted, I don’t spend a lot of time on Goodreads to learn the latest news. Just my two cents, which may not even be worth that much!

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  10. Posting reviews can become overwhelming. I try to write mine immediately after I finish the book otherwise it hangs over me and I start to dread having to sit down a write it up.

    The Bell Pepper Romance event is an instagram thing. I think that is mostly where it’s being promoted, but I haven’t seen any posts without searching for them so I’m not sure how popular it is so far. And yes, just randomly talking about Bell peppers and romance without any explanation would be confusing. πŸ™‚ I’m doing my bit by reading some of the authors’ books and doing a few giveaways. They mostly seem to be indie authors so I guess it’s just a different way of getting the word out about their books. Oh and November is National Bell Pepper month so that’s the tie in. Happy Reading, CC!

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  11. Good evening, Kav! Even though I’m late to the party, I’ll take a cup of hot chocolate & your famous chocolate chip cookies straight from the oven, please. πŸ˜ƒ I have had issues with Amazon about my reviews. Seems like it comes in spurts. Sometimes I edit them & resubmit, sometimes I don’t change a word & they eventually come through. One time I tried to resubmit one and they wouldn’t let me at all. So I called them & they admitted nothing was wrong with the review & posted it on the site. Frustrating!

    NetGalley is on my naughty list right now. Like we discussed before, not only did they take away my auto-approval for years of faithful reviewing, they won’t approve my requests either (they meaning Bethany & Revell). But Barbour & Tyndale will & I still have auto-approval with Thomas Nelson, so that’s good enough. I don’t have a special NG shelf on Goodreads except I may’ve put a couple on there when I was on a street team & they asked us to do that. Also the descriptors on NG? I’m not sure what that’s all about. I don’t have that on mine, so I think you’re fine not doing that.

    If I post a link to a review or promote a book on social media I may tag the author once. I think they get so many mss’gs & tags that they don’t even see them bc sometimes they respond to my tag & sometimes not.

    I’m not a big hash tag person, but I use them as short add ons. Say for example I post about a great book & underneath I’ll put #Christianfiction #historical #awardwinningauthor #newrelease, etc. Not sure I’m even using them right, but use them to better describe or emphasize my book promo or whatever I’m posting about.

    As far as the bell pepper thingy, IG locked me out when I tried to open an acc’t. When they told me to enter my email I did that & they’d say I entered an email already taken & that was my email. lol So they took me back to the beginning & finally I just gave up & said I really don’t need IG. I’ve got enough going on! Rather have your chocolate chip cookies than bell peppers anyway. πŸ˜‹

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You have IG woes and I have Facebook woes — the bots are out to get us either way! Interesting that you found a way to actually talk to a human at Amazon! I was in a panic because those nasty bots threatened to block my account which would mean not only wouldn’t I be able to post reviews, I wouldn’t be able to buy gift books either. I had a mild heart attack that day. πŸ™‚

      I wonder if publishers on Net Galley check to see how many books a reviewer has received from them and when it gets to a certain number they don’t approve as many ARCs? Or, maybe because it’s Bethany House and Revell and they seem to be merging, that has something to do with it. I checked their website and the links to the review programs aren’t working so maybe once they sort the merger out they will get back to normal. It’s disconcerting though to think about that merger because it likely means less books being published.

      I’m toasting you with my hot chocolate, Diane. Happy Reading!

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      1. I talked to more than 1 person on Amazon. They’d put me on hold & drop my call so l’d have to call back & explain everything all over again. I probably talked to at least 8 reps, but it was just a matter of principle. Ugh, what an experience! But THAT would freak me out if they locked me out! 😳 You poor dear.

        As far as NG, as long as you’re sending links to all the places online you post I’d think they’d be happy with that. I have 100% feedback, however, I wonder if this is a case of one bad apple spoiling the whole bunch. Curious as to how many folks they don’t get feedback/links to reviews from. πŸ€” I read a review on NG the other day that was one sentence & no thought was put into it at all. I mean that’s OK if you buy the book yourself, but if they’re providing the book, I think they want to hear more than that. What you liked, what you didn’t like, etc. Toasting you back, Kav! β˜• Have a great day!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I’m impressed with your perseverance regarding Amazon humans. πŸ™‚

        I am surprised at how many people continue to get Net Galley ARCs though their review rate is really low — like 20 – 30%! They recommend you don’t go lower than 80% which is easy enough for me to do because I’m only getting audio books in very specific genres. I guess some people have a large following (I’m thinking booktubers and bookstagramers) so maybe the publishers feel like it’s worth it on the chance of getting that much exposure?

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      3. My patience was wearing thin, especially when one of the reps hung up on me bc I couldn’t understand her. All I said was, I’m sorry I can’t understand you, could you get me an English speaking representative? Not the thing to say because well . . . I got hung up on. πŸ˜‚ I meant no disrespect. We just had a very strong communications gap!

        I agree. They definitely want you to have a large following because that’s 1 of the questions they ask you when you go to re-apply to Bethany & Revell. I decided not to re-apply, bc how do you have a following when you post reviews on about 15 bookseller sites? I even post on Indigo Ca. Basically as you suggested I think they’re narrowing it down to blog, booktubers, and bookstagramer followers. I’m looking at the bright side. Now I don’t have to post on 15 different bookseller sites! πŸ˜‰ Unless I’m on an author’s street team, of course. Happy reading, Kav! ❀

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  12. I don’t usually tag the author/publisher on social media review posts (unless I’m asked to for a review team), but for me I think it’s more a self-conscious thing. Like β€œHey, look at me! I left a review for you, now come over here and praise me for it!”
    Yeah…no.
    So I have no idea if we’re supposed to or not, lol, but I do it when it’s requested (I assume they request it on review teams to keep tabs on their members fulfilling commitments) and otherwise I just don’t.

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  13. I have no words to offer except on tagging author and publishers on IG. I tag them because I know a lot of authors have told me it’s really encouraging. Although of course don’t tag them in a bad review. Publishers(specifically Bethany House) have a contest of photos/reviews they are tagged in every month. So in essence they encourage it, which since then I tag other publishers now. Yes some authors do comment, but most times they maybe like it at most and let it go. Other authors comment and give you a shout-out. I do it just to encourage the author. If they comment or not isn’t a big deal for me lol.

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    1. Sarahdar, that’s why I tag an author at least once. They always say a good review encourages them & keeps them going. I’m not on any of Christy Barritt’s street teams & didn’t know if she was even aware of me or not, she has so many reader fans! Which is fine if she wasn’t. lol But I wanted to bring attention to her new book, Vacation Friends, bc it was so good & I tagged her. Not to see my review, but just to encourage her. About a week later I saw her promote Vacation Friends on her author pg and at the top she had quoted a few lines out of my review. I was very touched by that gesture from her. So the encouragement works both ways! Sorry, Kav. Carry on. πŸ˜•

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      1. Yes it does! And it builds that relationship between author and readers. It makes them more human and not so much celebrity when they do respond. Lol at least in my mind they are like celebrities.

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      2. Oh, I like this. A different perspective. I have started tagging publishers with my Net Galley reviews on IG, guess II could do it with other books as well. Authors too. I can see how it could be encouraging. Hadn’t thought of that. Thanks Sarah and Diane!

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  14. Amazon – It’s my understanding that you only need to post on one. I had a problem once when I tried to post in both and that’s what I was told.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hmmm, that’s interesting. I’ve been posting on both for years without a problem. I thought the authors would want the reviews on both since those are the reviews that show up first depending on which country you’re signed in for. Ah well, we’ll muddle through and see what happens. I kinda figure if I post on both and only one goes through at least I’ve managed to post a review. lol

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