But money is another important aspect. It takes money to create a good site and money to maintain and improve a site like ours. Authors often don't like paying for ads, interviews, etc. The problem is, if the site isn't paying for itself, it goes away. They don't understand the number of people we reach and what it costs to maintain a site like ours. Some authors are appalled that sites like ours would charge to promote their titles. Hey, think New York Times, People, USA Today… We may be small, but like them, we have to have revenue to survive. I can never understand why they don't blink an eye at the idea of a magazine, television or newspaper ad, but believe that the internet should be free.
Note: We don't charge to review a title.
How should an author contact you about a review request? Do you review e-books as well?
An author should go to www.armchairinterviews.com and click on our FAQ for review submissions and follow the directions. You'd be amazed how many people don't think the rules apply to them. Often though, they read? the directions and send me an email and a link to their web site so I can gather the necessary information myself. That will not get an author a review. Time is short; we have about 400 submissions a month and can't fill them all. It's easier to go with the people who follow the directions. So read the FAQ and follow the directions! How to get that review or interview is another Q & A interview and one every author should hear if they want review coverage. But that's for another time.
Do you think there’s a lot of ‘facile praise’ among many online review sites? What is your policy when it comes to negative reviews?
Criticism is okay. And we criticize books. But we will never, ever trash a book or an author. We want to celebrate authors and their work. If a book (and unfortunately it's almost always self-published) is so awful (poorly written, edited, etc.) we won't review it at all and inform the author of the issues. But we'd like authors to remember: A review is one person's opinion.
In your opinion, what defines a ‘legitimate’ reviewer?
I'm not sure I can give you a definitive answer. It's like art; I may not know what good art is, but I'll tell you when I see some. Peruse the sites. What do they look like? How many titles have they reviewed? Do they offer anything besides reviews (nice for building traffic and authors want traffic)? If you contact them do they respond in a timely manner and are they professional in their responses? Ask them how long they've been in business and what their stats are.








Article comments
1 - Margay
Andrea, I like your stand on the business and how you present yourself. I also like the idea of the audio blurb. That's clever.
2 - A. F. Stewart
Lovely interview, nice observations. Good luck with the book and future projects.
3 - Beverly McClure
Wow! You are a busy family, Andrea. Thanks for the great information. I'm bookmarking your site to visit again.
Another super interview, Mayra.
Beverly
4 - Joy Delgado
Mayra, Thank you. Andrea, you are a very busy lady and I'm taking notes! I have your site bookmarked and will be looking into submitting my book I'm about to publish for an armchair review.
Joy
5 - c hoare
Another interesting interview that introduces me to a site I had not visited before, but will certainly do so again.
Chris H.