Current:Home > reviewsGoodreads has a 'review bombing' problem — and wants its users to help solve it -FundPrime
Goodreads has a 'review bombing' problem — and wants its users to help solve it
View
Date:2025-04-16 10:22:55
Cait Corrain was about to achieve the dream of every aspiring writer by publishing her first novel. Instead, her career has imploded following a controversy involving Goodreads, the popular book-lovers' website.
On Tuesday, Corrain's publisher, Del Rey Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House, said it would cancel publication of Corrain's novel, a science fiction fantasy called Crown of Starlight, after she admitted writing fake Goodreads reviews lauding her own book and excoriating works by other novelists. Corrain's literary agent has also cut ties with her.
This is not the first time Goodreads, which allows its 90 million users to rate books using one to five stars, has been the subject of a controversy involving its reviews. Earlier this year, the best-selling author Elizabeth Gilbert withdrew an upcoming novel about a Soviet-era family because critics wrongly assumed it was pro-Russian and flooded the site with one-star reviews.
Amazon-owned Goodreads makes little effort to verify users, and critics say this enables a practice known as review-bombing, in which a book is flooded with negative reviews, often from fake accounts, in an effort to bring down a its rating, sometimes for reasons having nothing to do with the book's contents.
Review-bombing can devastate a book's prospects, especially when the writer is little known or publishing for the first time.
"When a reader who is considering buying your book sees that you are controversial or your book is controversial, that's going to make them shy away from it," says writer and editor Lindsay Ellis. She says she herself was review-bombed because she had criticized author J. K. Rowling's remarks about the transgender community.
Corrain's downfall came after internet sleuths published a Google document detailing a number of Goodreads accounts praising Crown of Starlight and giving low reviews to works by other writers, many of them people of color.
Corrain first claimed that the reviews had been created by an overly zealous friend named Lilly who was attempting to boost the book's prospects. She later conceded she herself was the author, writing a lengthy apology in which she attributed her actions to "a complete psychological breakdown."
The author subsequently shut down her social media accounts and could not be reached for comment.
Goodreads said it has removed the fake reviews posted by Corrain, and in a statement issued last month it urged users to flag other suspicious accounts.
It also said it would increase efforts "to quickly detect and moderate content and accounts that violate our reviews or community guidelines," by intervening during periods of intense activity that suggest efforts to review-bomb a book.
Publishing industry veteran Jane Friedman says the move would stop efforts to review-bomb popular writers such as Gilbert. But she said it would probably do little to protect most other writers.
"That's very welcome and I hope they do continue that, but this low-level review bombing, it's never going to catch that sort of activity because it's too small," she said.
Goodreads relies on a team of volunteer "librarians" to ensure the accuracy of information about books and authors, but the sheer number of reviews the site publishes — more than 300 million ratings in the past year alone — makes it subject to abuses.
"Goodreads just makes it so easy to engage in that bad behavior," Friedman says.
One unusual feature about Goodreads is that it allows reviews to be posted before a book has been published, which helps generate early buzz. Many publishers even send out early copies to influential Goodreads users, hoping they will talk up the book.
Sometimes, reviews are published even before a book is finished.
George R. R. Martin's seventh book in his phenomenally popular "A Song of Ice and Fire" series has already generated thousands of reviews. He hasn't yet finished the sixth.
veryGood! (92)
Related
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- New cars in California could alert drivers for breaking the speed limit
- Head of FEMA tours deadly storm damage in Houston area as more residents get power back
- Analysis: Iran’s nuclear policy of pressure and talks likely to go on even after president’s death
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Shaboozey fans talk new single, Beyoncé, Black country artists at sold-out Nashville show
- The Real Story Behind Why Kim Kardashian Got Booed at Tom Brady's Roast
- Don't want to lug that couch down the stairs yourself? Here's how to find safe movers
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Daily marijuana use outpaces daily drinking in the US, a new study says
Ranking
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Aaron Rodgers: I would have had to retire to be RFK Jr.'s VP but 'I wanted to keep playing'
- At least 40 villagers shot dead in latest violence in Nigeria’s conflict-hit north
- Louisiana Republicans reject Jewish advocates’ pleas to bar nitrogen gas as an execution method
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Archaeologists search English crash site of World War II bomber for remains of lost American pilot
- Caitlin Clark's Latest Basketball Achievement Hasn't Been Done Since Michael Jordan
- Most of passengers from battered Singapore Airlines jetliner arrive in Singapore from Bangkok
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Israel’s block of AP transmission shows how ambiguity in law could restrict war coverage
Pesticide concerns prompt recall of nearly 900,000 Yogi Echinacea Immune Support tea bags
Severe turbulence on Singapore Airlines flight 321 from London leaves 1 dead, others injured, airline says
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Oregon man charged in the deaths of 3 women may be linked to more killings: Authorities
Congolese army says it has foiled a coup attempt. Self-exiled opposition figure threatens president
Reese Witherspoon and Gwyneth Paltrow Support Jennifer Garner After She Cries at Daughter's Graduation