novella
Active Member
Three main ways for me:
--I have a huge, sort of famous, used book dealer near me, and she vets what she puts on the shelves very carefully. She's read almost everything she sells and only buys books she thinks have quality. Average price for hardcovers is about 3-4 dollars, so I just go spend 30 bucks or so and fill a bag up. If I don't like all of them, well, ten books altogether cost about the same as a new list-price hardcover. So it's not that big a gamble.
--sometimes I read the obituary of an author I haven't heard of. This is rare, but has been extremely reliable.
--I read first chapters online whenever I'm thinking of getting a new book. If I don't like the first chapter, I probably won't like the book.
I never trust book reviews, and I find most recommendations pretty iffy.
--I have a huge, sort of famous, used book dealer near me, and she vets what she puts on the shelves very carefully. She's read almost everything she sells and only buys books she thinks have quality. Average price for hardcovers is about 3-4 dollars, so I just go spend 30 bucks or so and fill a bag up. If I don't like all of them, well, ten books altogether cost about the same as a new list-price hardcover. So it's not that big a gamble.
--sometimes I read the obituary of an author I haven't heard of. This is rare, but has been extremely reliable.
--I read first chapters online whenever I'm thinking of getting a new book. If I don't like the first chapter, I probably won't like the book.
I never trust book reviews, and I find most recommendations pretty iffy.