One
thing I’ve learned about Christian fiction – never write a bad review.
I
learned that lesson the hard way. When I first started this blog, I was naïve.
I read a lot of Christian fiction, but I hadn’t paid much attention to the
norms of the industry, like “thou shalt not write a bad review of Christian book
or novel, even if it’s bad.”
A
few months into blogging, I wrote an unfavorable review of a novel that was
clearly in the Christian fiction genre. The writing was good; it truly was. But
the novel had structural problems – serious structural problems that were
actually there by design. My major issue was that it should have been disclosed
on the cover, and not left for the reader to discover in the last 10 pages that
this wasn’t a self-contained novel but more of a serialization.
I
posted my review, and the apocalypse arrived in short order. If you think
Christians aren’t capable of intimidation campaigns, then you don’t know the
friends of Christian writers. It was ugly. Emails – blog comments – things said
online generally – it was ugly. It was capped by an exchange of emails with the
book’s editor, in which things were said about me, my review, and the Christian
book publishing industry that blew my socks off. The nicest thing said in the email
exchange was “you don’t understand what the author is trying to do.”
Unfortunately,
I did understand.
But
I pulled the review. Yes, I caved. I have never mentioned the writer again, nor
have I read any of the subsequent books written. And I’ve actually reviewed
only one other book by that publisher in the five years since, and it was
non-fiction.
When
I begin reading in the Christian fiction genre today, I can usually tell
whether it’s going to be good or bad within the first 20 pages. If it’s bad, I stop
reading. I don’t review bad books. I have returned books to publishers saying I
believe the book is bad and that I have a policy of not reviewing bad novels.
If I’ve bought the book in question myself (which is usually the case), I place
in the “giveaway pile” for a local charity.
I’m
not the only one out there doing this. It’s kind of a conspiracy of silence –
and it’s likely keeping Christian fiction from developing into something
better. But it seems to be an unwritten, unspoken commandment – don’t write bad
reviews of a Christian novel.
I’m
reading a book by a favorite author right now. I’ve been tempted to stop at
several points. It’s well written, and an interesting story, but it’s been
over-researched, with all the research pushed into the story. Too much detail
is taking the mystery and mystique out; I’m not sure if I’m reading a story or
a magazine article.
And
there are too many negative things afflicting the hero. I’m three-fourths of
the way through the book, and I know there are two, possibly three, more
negative things coming, including a lot of violence. I know it will ultimately
end okay, but at times it just seems too much. One big impending promise of
violence is enough; two seem too much to me.
Will
I do a review of the book? No.
Will
I continue to read the author? Yes. The author is a fine writer and an engaging
storyteller.
I’m
likely more sensitive to this because I have two of my own novels published.
The most critical review of Dancing
Priest said something like this: “It’s written in a plain, almost news
story style, and I prefer lots of atmosphere.” If that’s as bad as it gets,
that’s not bad. And the comment about the style is true.
But
it is a question, this relationship (or lack of one) between reviewers and Christian
fiction. Are we only supposed to write good reviews? Do we ignore the badly
written, or badly constructed, or books with serious flaws? Is this what
publishers of Christian fiction expect? Or is the expectation that we overlook
the flaws and give everything a good review (which maybe a nice way of saying “if
you don’t like it, you’re supposed to say you do,” or “lie about it”)?
I
have an answer; I’m not sure I want to implement it.
So
in the meantime, I don’t review bad novels.