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Becca Freeman's avatar

One thing that I think is missing from the blurb conversation is that it gets authors to ACTUALLY READ the book (and do so in advance of publication). I know my own TBR is always at risk of toppling, and despite best intentions I don't always get around to reading books by internet mutuals in a timely manner (and sometimes at all).

If I've read it to blurb, I'm ready to talk about it at launch and promote it in a more specific way than "my friend did a thing." This might not apply to all authors, but I think especially in getting authors with strong platforms to act as surrogates, the blurb process works in a back door way to do that.

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gromet's avatar

It makes sense to me if blurbs go away. They have lured me into buying a few books, but I don’t trust them anymore. Too often, halfway through the read, I’ve ended up wondering if the blurber is the writer’s close personal friend. Maybe his lawyer, or girlfriend? Like the book is objectively not “a searing prose freight train of human heart,” okay? Blurber, you should have just said it “feels like a Netflix limited series produced in Belgium.”

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