Book Puff by Debbie Bennett
When I read a book, I enter into a temporary relationship with the author. I give
them my time – a small fraction of my life: hours and minutes. In return,
the author promises to entertain me. Money may or may not exchange hands, and
the entertainment may involve laughs, shivers and checking under the bed, but
the basic promise remains. Time vs entertainment. If I like the book, I may
enter into a longer relationship and buy all of the author’s books. But still
there is a promise made.
So I read the book. There’s a build-up of tension (I
read mostly crime or thrillers these days). I get to know the characters. The
author lets me sit on his shoulder and peer into his world. There’s an
agreement that in return for an investment of my time, he will let me stay
there and enjoy the view. I’m comfy and it’s looking good.
The little % marker on my kindle climbs slowly. My brain
is registering this, processing it in terms of what is, and what will happen in
the plot. I’m expecting the big reveal, the climax at some point. And then it
arrives and I find out whodunnit and why. Oh
wow, I think. Impressive. There’s
still some % to go, so this can’t be it. There’s going to be one hell of a
twist coming that will turn what I thought was the climax on its head. And I
close my kindle and go to work; in the car I’m thinking about the book (am I
just weird, or does everybody do that?) and how it’s going to end.
Home from work. Tea on. Mess around online for a bit.
I’m on my own tonight, so I’ll finish that novel while I’m eating. Sit down and
open my kindle. The promise is still there, not yet delivered and I turn the
page, expecting a new chapter.
And I get Amazon’s please
rate this book pop-up.
What? Where’s my 5%? My extra twist I was waiting for? It’s not fair! And the last 5% of the “book”
is puff: reviews, the first chapter of the next book/another book/whatever. I
don’t know because I’ve slammed my kindle shut and glowered over my chips.
People (readers and writers alike) seem diametrically
opposed here. Many, like me cry Nooo!
And vow that said author will never darken the screens of our kindles again. Others
say But you still got 100% of the book,
so what’s the problem? And it’s true – I haven’t lost anything. The book
wasn’t cut short. But I still feel cheated in some way – my expectations have been altered and that agreement I made with the author on page one has somehow been
violated. That amazing post-climactic twist I was anticipating never arrived.
I know, I exaggerate. But honestly – why do it? I’ve
never yet read chapter one of a new book at the end of an old book. I’m
perfectly capable of looking for the author on Amazon if I want to buy more. And
I don’t mind a few lines – a link to the author’s web or Amazon page. But not
another 5% of content.
Apologies to those traditional authors who have no
control over what their publishers do. And those indies who find that adding
extra post-novel content works for them – good luck to you. I wish you all the
best. But I’m unlikely to be reading you while eating my chips …
Comments
But not adverts in disguise, whichever kind of book! Pah!
That said, we're well advised, I think, not to put anything extra up front--because preview pages are limited.