Review Index

Contact:

Email me at mookseandgripes [at] gmail [dot] com

Follow me @mookse

Transparency Statement

If the book reviewed was sent to me for free by the publisher, I have indicated as much in a caption under the book's cover image.

For a detailed explanation of my review policy, click here.

The New Yorker Fiction Forum

New Yorker Original Cover

Click here to see what's happening in the fiction of each issue of The New Yorker.

Last Five Issues: ____________________________

2012 Book Awards

  • National Book Critics Circle Award
    • Winner: Edith Pearlman's Binocular Vision
  • The Story Prize
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
    • Winner: Julie Otsuka's The Buddha in the Attic
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Teju Cole: Open City
  • Pulitzer Prize
    • Winner: No award given
  • Best Translated Book Award
    • Winner: Wieslaw Mysliwski: Stone Upon Stone
  • Orange Prize
    • Winner: May 30, 2012
  • International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award
    • Winner: June 13, 2012
  • Man Booker Prize
    • Winner: October
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: October
  • Giller Prize
    • Shadow Winner: Early November
    • Winner: Early November
  • National Book Award
    • Winner: November
____________________________

2011 Book Awards

  • The Story Prize
    • Winner: Anthony Doerr's Memory Wall
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
    • Winner: Deborah Eisenberg's The Collected Stories of Deborah Eisenberg
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Brando Skyhorse: The Madonnas of Echo Park
  • PEN/Malamud Award
    • Winner: Edith Pearlman
  • International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award
    • Winner: Colum McCann's Let the Great World Spin
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: Tomas Tranströmer
  • National Book Award
    • Winner: Jesmyn Ward's Salvage the Bones
____________________________

2010 Book Awards

  • National Book Critics Circle Award
    • Winner: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall
  • The Story Prize
    • Winner: Daniyal Mueenuddin's In Other Rooms, Other Wonders
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
    • Winner: Sherman Alexie's War Dances
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Brigid Pasulka's A Long, Long Time Ago and Essentially True
  • Pulitzer Prize
  • PEN/Malamud Award
    • Winner: Nam Le & Edward P. Jones
  • Orange Prize
    • Winner: Barbara Kingsolver's The Lacuna
  • International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: Mario Vargas Llosa
____________________________

2009 Book Awards

  • National Book Critics Circle Award
    • Winner: Roberto Bolano's 2666
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Michael Dahlie's A Gentleman's Guide to Graceful Living
  • Best Translated Book Award
    • Winner: Attila Bartis: Tranquility
  • Orange Prize
    • Winner: Marilynne Robinson's Home
  • International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award
    • Winner: Michael Thomas's Man Gone Down
  • Man Booker Prize
    • Winner: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: Herta Müller
  • National Book Award
    • Winner: Colum McCann's Let the Great World Spin

Review Policy

To explain my interest in transparency, I am including this “review policy” page.

The Mookse and the Gripes is a book review / book discussion website, independent from any author, publisher, or book prize.  I began it in July 2008 because I have a love for reading and discussing books, and I wanted a forum where I could write my own ideas down about what I was currently reading.  Shortly after I started the blog I got an email from an author/publisher asking if I’d like a free review copy of a book.  I remember running in to tell my wife that I had been offered a free book, I was so excited!  Then, settled down a bit, I looked at the book in question.  I had no interest in it and didn’t think I’d read it even though it would arrive at my door for free.  Nevertheless, I felt a twinge of desire to force myself into it.  A free book!  And recognition!  Thankfully I overcame that twinge of desire and told the author/publisher that I was not interested in receiving the book, surely there is some other forum for it.  That was the start of what has eventually become a formulaic response:  “Thank you for the kind offer.  I’m sorry to say that I’m not interested in [your book], but I do wish you the best of luck promoting it.”  And it wasn’t just books.  Marketers for films, music, clubs, etc. frequently ask whether this blog would be interested in promoting whatever they are promoting.  Though I decline, I don’t condemn them.  Frankly, I usually just am not interested in reading the book offered or in promoting an upcoming film.  And after all, this blog is here primarily to discuss with those interested books (or book-related things) that I find interesting.

As fortune would have it, I now receive free review copies from a small number of publishers in whom I have a genuine personal/literary interest because they consistently publish the type of books I want to read and discuss.  The names of the publishers I’m most interested in are on the publisher blogroll.  Am I promoting these publishers?  You bet!  In my opinion, they deserve it.  Did they ask me to do this?  No, however much they may have hoped I would.  Never has a publisher from whom I get review copies attempted to leverage my reviewing independence by offering gifts.  Never has there been a quid pro quo arrangement.  The decision to promote a publisher is my own.  As is the decision to promote anything else on this blog, like The Book Depository — free worldwide shipping (a true blessing, especially at Booker time)!

That said, when I receive for free books I am interested in, books I would purchase by the truckload if I had the money, I have a greater propensity to maintain a good relationship with these publishers by, say, writing a positive review about a book I really didn’t like.  This propensity is increased because I highly respect some of these publishers and want to throw all support I can their way, just like I would with a good book.  They have some amazing projects that aren’t based fully — and not at all, in some cases — on profits.  They believe in publishing good literature from around the world despite the fact that these aren’t usually best sellers.  Despite my greater propensity to write a dishonest review, I do my best to be objective and honest.  Though surely I’m influenced by these factors, however unconsciously.  

Therefore, I agree with the path chosen by other bloggers.  I  feel that readers of this blog should, when considering my opinion, judge for themselves whether I might have a conflict of interest when I’m laying praise on a book.  If I review a book I received from the publisher for free, it is indicated in the review as a caption to the book’s cover image.  If nothing is indicated, the book is from my personal library, purchased by me or for me as a gift.

On a final note, I think writing is a difficult task, and those who do it in good faith deserve our respect.  That doesn’t mean their book deserves our good opinion, but I try not to publish a review that is entirely negative (I probably missed something, anyway).  If I didn’t like a book on some level, I probably didn’t finish it and won’t review it.  If I finished it, something drove me to the end, and I often come around to liking the book when it is illuminated by others’ comments.  Admittedly, sometimes what drove me to the end is some external factor, like a book prize (Booker 2008 is a good example); I don’t mind negativity in these cases because it spurs such interesting conversations about books that have been granted at least a modicum of praise already.

17 comments to Review Policy

  • Feel free to comment on this page to let me know your thoughts on this subject.

  • Never has a publisher from whom I get review copies attempted to leverage my reviewing independence by offering gifts.

    You aren’t smooching with the right publishers.

  • Send them my way, John! I can always revise my review policy :)

  • Nobody’s ever sent me a free book so I haven’t had the problem, Trevor!
    Australian publishers must be stingier than UK ones LOL.

  • Much as I love the idea of free books, I would not be able to force myself to read and review books outside of my range of interest of world literary fiction either.Reviewing is a lot of work anyway (at least I find it that so)… Kudos and props. As usual your blog sets the standard.

    Randy

  • Lisa, the publishers sending me stuff are the very generous ones in the U.S. Good luck if you want the advanced copies to start transforming your blog! It’s fun!

    Randy, thanks for the generous words! I must disclose, however, that the standard has been set by at least two bloggers familiar to me: KevinfromCanada, with whom I’ve been discussing this matter, and Kimbofo of Reading Matters, who has had a review policy since 2006 (I think). But I do feel much better now that I’ve articulated my own and can let readers know how I conduct myself on this end.

  • Your statement is one that I heartily endorse (and hence will not write my own). I also would like to think that your recent thoughts about legal ethics have influenced this decision.

    I do think the transparency issue is more important to those of us in North America than in Europe — there are many more sinister forces at play here. And I can’t help but note that kimbofo, another ex-pat, was the first to articulate a policy.

  • Very admirable. I lasted less than a fortnight in Amazon’s Vine programme for similar reasons. I realised there was few books, if any, I would buy myself.

  • I don’t accept books that I don’t want.

    If I don’t like a book, I won’t finish it nor review it. I figure that the author put some sweat and tears into his/her work and I wouldn’t want to discourage the authors. Also, it might also be my mood.I sometimes go back to books that I hated and find that I like them now.

    Right now, I am not accepting anything from anyone due to hurricane season. I need to be ready to evacuate and don’t want to think about the ARCs that I haven’t touched.

  • So pleased to see this on your blog, Trevor. When I first raised the ethics of book bloggers receiving free books the scale of venom sent my way was not pleasant. I got called everything from a dweeb to a slattern. That was in November 2006. I’m delighted that the tide seems, at long last, to have shifted in the other direction.

    By the way, you have a wonderful blog. I visit often but don’t always comment.

  • I want to second kimbofo’s comment. Certainly there are bloggers who want free products and use their blog to promote that. I have no issue with them.

    But then there are others (and kimbofo’s latest post of the Great Hall in Trinity College, Dublin, is my best possible example) who want to share our experience with the world — sometimes that fits a publisher’s agenda and sometimes it does not. Telling our visitors what our source was is not a bid deal.

    Whereas, Australia beating England in the final Test match is. Barrack on, Australia!!!!!

  • Wholeheardtedly agree with your policy Trevor.

    It’s good to see that when it comes to cricket, Kevin has become an honourary Australian!

  • Sarah: I have actually bet 20 pounds on Australia to win the Test — it is all kimbofo’s fault for doing a post that featured a picture of the Ashes. The worst thing is that my name is Kevin Peterson which is dangerously close to……not Ricky Ponting. I’m thinking of changing my name to Hilfenhaus. And Trevor has to put up with this because he thought Netherland was a great book, so he must be interested in cricket.

  • Cricket to me is like the American Dream. I see a lot of people enjoying it, and I want to be a part of it — but it’s still a bit vague and intangible. I do want to understand it better.

    Thanks for your comments, everyone. The content of the blog won’t change much (just that little caption under the book cover), but it’s nice to have this out there. I feel clean!

  • By the way, this post has already been viewed more than many of my other posts are on their first days. And today was a busier day than usual on the blog. Looks like I should give up reviewing books and focus my energy on writing review policies :).

  • Colette Jones

    Trevor, I’m confused about this. Are you saying that you will write that you like a book that you don’t actually like? Or are you saying that you might write that you like a book that you don’t actually like?

    I don’t understand what legal ramifications are being intimated but if you review a book I would want to know what you really think. Should I avoid reading the reviews of books which were given to you by the publishers?

  • Hi Colette. I’m glad you raised these concerns and that I have an opportunity to clarify. (Now that I’ve written all that’s below, I’m not sure it does clarify anything. Let me know!)

    To answer your first question: no, I will not say that I like a book that I don’t like. I do my very best to be honest and to say exactly how I feel about a book.

    When I wrote about the potential conflicts of interest and other influences (personal relationship with publishers, desire to continue receiving free advanced copies of books), I wasn’t saying that I consciously am affected by them but that I just might be (even subconsciously), and it’s up to the reader to guage and to keep me honest.

    By expressing these concerns, I’m merely expressing the need for such a policy, not that I’m a particularly dishonest person. By disclosing which books I get for free, in my mind I’m giving the reader valuable information about my review. Readers have no reason to trust me. I’m not a syndicated writer. I’m not a professional reviewer. I work for myself on a platform I created myself. I could be very self-serving.

    There are no legal ramifications — at least none that I’m aware of — if I misrepresent my opinion of a book (it would be mere puffery and not fraud) — another reason a clear policy is necessary. If I misrepresent facts about the author or about the book, my liability would be a different story.

    I know a lot of bloggers say that if honesty is the policy, nothing else matters, disclose whether a book is a review copy or don’t. I respect these bloggers’ decisions. I agree that honesty should be the policy, but in the blog world there are a lot of other very real influences at play that can eschew that result. Some say that a blog review is no different from newspaper review, but I don’t agree. The honest review might be the same, but the forum is totally different. Newspapers have an editorial policy that has been disciplined and refined through the years. Blogs don’t. Also, a reputable newspaper with a paid book reviewer isn’t afraid that a publisher might stop sending them books because that would be the publisher’s loss, not theirs (most of the time). It could be the reverse with blogs. Also, most newspapers have a selection and assignment process that doesn’t involve the reviewer. The reviewer gets the book and the assignment (often based on their interests and abilities, newspapers do want to give a book the proper response). There might be other conflicts in this process, but to me they don’t seem as extreme as those in the blog world.

    So, I don’t think you should avoid reading the reviews of books which were given to me by publishers (they’re very good books, for the most part), but I think you should know that I’m getting a stream of books from these publishers. That readers know I might be affected doesn’t get me off the hook. This policy doesn’t give me a license to lie just because it is apparently transparent. But it is a degree of honesty that I think is necessary for blogs, particular those written by non-professional book lovers who mainly started their blogs just to expres their love for books.

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