by Theresa Garee | Jun 7, 2020 | Blog
Easily Create Amazon Review Links
What author doesn’t love reviews of her book?
Would you love to make it easier for readers to write reviews?
What if instead of requiring our readers to scroll and scan an Amazon page to find the review page link, we could send them directly to the page where they write the review?
We can!
Here’s the trick. In just a few simple steps, you can easily create Amazon review links that open directly to the Amazon review page of your book. With one click, the reader is at the review page.
Use this simple formula:
Amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin= + your book’s ASIN or ISBN 10 at the end of the link
The ISBN for Depression Hates a Moving Target is 1642500135, the ebook ASIN is 1642500135, and the audiobook ASIN is B07WT5M3SP.
Use the same formula for each format: paperback, hardback, ebook, audiobook, etc.
Here’s how the link to the paperback looks:
Amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=1642500135
It opens to this page.
This one’s for the ebook:
Amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B084GRLRXK
And finally, one for the audiobook:
Amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B07WT5M3SP
I used the same formula to create Amazon review links for You Should Be Writing:
Amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=1642502553
And this one is for the ebook:
Amazon.com/review/create-review?&asin=B084GRLRXK
Follow this simple formula for each of your book formats.
Create your own to post on social media, in your blog, and email newsletters.
Have fun and go get those reviews!
by Theresa Garee | Jul 17, 2019 | Blog
DHAMT Featured on No Paine No Gain Blog and Runningdad Podcast
Runner and proud father Noel Paine gave Depression Hates a Moving Target: How Running with My Dog Brought Me Back from the Brink a thumbs up on his blog, No Paine, No Gain.
Noel writes:
WHAT I THOUGHT
The book is very readable and flows easily. It is a book about Nita’s personal journey and how running and of course her dog help her through a tough time. A time – I refer to mental health. Like myself who struggled with depression for a period, she uses lacing to help her get to a good place. I finished the book and liked what I read – I was able to relate, like dreading about her struggles with running, life, weight etc. The story is real, human and written with heart.
This is a book I think any runner will like and especially those beginner runners and those who run and who have or currently battle for positive mental health. Well written Nita!
Read the full review!
He also generously interviewed me on Runningdad Podcast on May 10, 2019. Listen here!
Noel is the author of Talking Running: Stories, Profiles, and Conversations with the Running Community. Be sure to follow him on Twitter at “Runningdad has a running book!”
Thanks again, Noel!
Disclaimer: This post may contain affiliate links.
by Theresa Garee | Jul 9, 2019 | Blog
DHAMT Featured on Snowflakes in a Blizzard Blog
A friend recommended Darrell Laurant’s email newsletter and blog, Snowflakes in a Blizzard, last year when we were discussing places to find new books. The site’s claim to fame is:
Separating authors from the herd and giving them one-on-one time with readers.
The weekly “Weather Report” and individual book emails, help me find lovely books I would never have discovered.
I’m excited to report that this week’s “Weather Report” and blog included my memoir, Depression Hates a Moving Target: How Running with My Dog Brought Me Back from the Brink.
Read the review here!
If you haven’t already subscribed to Snowflakes in a Blizzard, you’re missing out. Follow his WordPress site.
If you’re an author, check out the guidelines for having your book included.
You can also follow Snowflakes in a Blizzard on Twitter and Facebook.
Disclaimer: This post may include affiliate links.
by Theresa Garee | Jun 3, 2019 | Blog, Write Now Columbus Essay Archives
Five Reasons to Review a Book and a Brief How-To
I’m embarrassed to admit how little I appreciated the importance of book reviews until my own book, Depression Hates a Moving Target, was published. Before that, I posted the occasional review on Goodreads and didn’t even know that some publisher sites (including Mango) accept reviews. I rarely left a review on Amazon.
How times change. Now I am ever-so-slightly obsessed with (I’m always obsessed with something) checking all those sites for reviews of my book. And I’ve gone so far as to spend your precious time telling you about it.
Why Leave a Review?
So just why should a person, especially a busy person with lots of competing interests and precious little time or energy, a person such as you, review the books you read?
1. To Remember the Book
I’ll go ahead and date myself. I’m old enough that I sometimes forget I’ve read a book, even if it seemed “memorable” at the time. It’s a bit frightening, but also enlightening to scan a review I’ve written. It refreshes my recollection and sometimes makes me want to read the book again.
2. To Forget the Book
Perhaps it’s part of my mental health challenge, but I don’t think I’m alone here. If I read a deeply moving (or deeply disturbing) book, I get “stuck” in the story. Characters and scenes stroll and scroll through my mind when I should be doing other things. Often I can’t sleep. I toss and turn, trapped by the book. But if I write a review, capturing the essence of what is looping through my mind, it releases me and helps me move on.
3. To Keep Yourself Honest
Many of us skim when we read. I’m no different. But in order to leave a detailed review, I must read deeply. If I want to review the book, I allow myself to slow down, sink in, and really pay attention. As a result, reading regains a pleasure it once lost.
4. To Share Your Joy (or Pain)
If I enjoy a book, I want other readers to know. If I detest a book, I want other readers to know. If I didn’t finish a book, I want other readers to know that too. Having said that, I do my best not to pan a book just because it wasn’t what I expected. I’m referring to the 3-star review Marko Kloos received because his novel wasn’t a 36-count package of Jimmy Dean sausages.
5. To Applaud the Author
I’ve always loved authors. Since my earliest days, people who created books out of thin air were my heroes. But now that I have personally gone through the entire process of not just writing a book and finding a publisher, but also marketing the book, I hold other authors in even higher esteem. I want to shout from the rooftops, “You did a really difficult thing! Great job!”
What Makes a “Good” Review?
As a published author, I appreciate the numbers game. Any positive review is lovely and a review of more than two sentences feels like a gift. But the reviews that stay with me are the ones in which the reader shares something personal about themselves and how the book made them feel. One reviewer said “Nita is inside my head.” Another wrote, “I had to stop at the end of one paragraph and call my mom.” Personal connections like these bring me to tears.
When I write reviews now, I remember how it felt to read reviews of my own book. I search for a place where I connect deeply with the book and share that with the author. This type of review achieves all the things I listed above and writing it feels fabulous since it provides the opportunity to cheer someone else along this twisting, winding, writing path.