Reviews and What to Say

Once you sell enough books to start getting reviews, it can be rough.  I’ve had a lot of really nice things said about my writing, as well as some not so nice.  It’s REALLY hard to respond to a review.  It’s probably good that some forums don’t allow you to respond, but in the past, when I saw a blog review of my book, I would always jot off a note.

I never berated, insulted, or even disagreed with a bad reviewer.  My standard answer was “I’m sorry my book wasn’t more to your liking.”  Why?  Why even respond.  The answer is absolutely no good reason.  It accomplishes nothing.  It’s just so damn hard not to.  But I’m going to try from this point.  I’m going to thank positive reviewers and just ignore negative ones.

I won’t respond to negative reviews.  You can bet your ass I’m still going to read them though.  I’m going to sit and read, cross my arms, stick out my lip, and fume about it.  Can’t help myself.  🙂

5 Star Reviews: His Robot Wife

Review by: Saurabh Patil on May. 08, 2011 :

Excellent sequel to His Robot Girlfriend. The flow was very harmonious and I was lost in futuristic life of Mike Smith as if I was part of the family. The book is short but sweet.

I am looking forward for an another sequel to it. (Maybe Her Robot grandma?)

Review by: Andreas Friedle on May. 11, 2011 :

I really enjoyed this book (But I think “My Robot Girlfriend” was a little bit better). It was short, but a very good read. For 1 dollar… excellent!
When there’s part 3 or something similar coming: I’ll read it.

The Drache Girl – 5 Star Review

5.0 out of 5 stars Cracking Adventure!, 20 Mar 2011

By S. Horrigan (London) – See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)

This review is from: The Drache Girl (Senta and the Steel Dragon) (Kindle Edition)
This series is set in an alternate version of a Victorian world that is similar to but not quite the same as Great Britain of the late 1800s only with magic, sorceresses, wizards, dragons, dinosaurs and lizard men!

In this, the third book of the series, the colony at Port Dechantagne has now been established for almost four years. The first settlers who came to seek their fortune on a new continent are now reaping the rewards of their labours. The colony is growing wealthy and starting to attract the attention of powerful people.

Senta now aged twelve years is growing up quickly and her natural skills as a sorceress are becoming more powerful with every day that passes. Senta and the dragon Bessemer who is now the size of a small horse, are loved by many, feared by some, but ignored by no one!

Political intrigue, treason, a native uprising, the threat of war both in the new world and at home, first love, and a great “magic duel” all feature in another absolutely cracking instalment of this multi-genre adventure series.

Once again the presentation of this book on the Kindle is first class.

Overall: 5 stars – I really didn’t want to put this book down. Senta and the Steel Dragon is fast becoming one of my favourite series for a long time! I hope that we don’t have to wait too long for part 4!

Thanks so much!

His Robot Wife – 5 Star Review

5.0 out of 5 stars thoroughly enjoyable, 18 Mar 2011

By Ms. S. J. Pearce “sallyjanepearce” – See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)

This review is from: His Robot Wife (Kindle Edition)
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. This is something I never would have read had it not been for purchasing the Kindle & I enjoyed it so much I went looking for other books by the same author. A good read which is well worth taking a chance on.

Thanks, Ms. Pearce!

Five Star Review for The Dark and Forbidding Land

5.0 out of 5 stars A very apt title., 17 Mar 2011

By S. Horrigan (London) – See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)

This review is from: The Dark and Forbidding Land (Senta and the Steel Dragon) (Kindle Edition)
I discovered Wesley Allison’s work only a short while ago when I read His Robot Wife. That story impressed me so much that I bought The Voyage of the Minotaur (Senta and the Steel Dragon) the first in the Senta and the Steel Dragon series.

The title of this second book is very appropriate. It is a much darker read than the first volume. The colony at Port Dechantagne has now been established for a couple of years and is expanding rapidly. More and more people are arriving looking for a new life, for adventure hunting dinosaurs or to trade with the colonists.

In places this book is a much less comfortable read than the first book. The native lizard men are servants almost in slavery to the humans. There is corporal and capital punishment, religious persecution and the parallels that are drawn to our own world and to some of the more abhorrent events in our history are very and sometimes brutally obvious. There is a lighter side though with the now 10 year old Senta, Bessemer the dragon and their gang of childhood friends running riot through the pages to keep the story in balance.

Once again presentation is perfect and again idiomatic English is used to great effect.

Overall 5 stars. This was a highly enjoyable read and I will definitely be downloading the next in the series but I am fully expecting the story to get much darker before the end.

Five Star Review for The Voyage of the Minotaur

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars It really shouldn’t work but it does!, 16 Mar 2011
By S. Horrigan (London) – See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)

This review is from: The Voyage of the Minotaur (Senta and the Steel Dragon) (Kindle Edition)
After reading and being rather impressed with Wesley Allison’s novel His Robot Wife I decided to read some more of his work on the Kindle.
This story is totally different! Set in the country of Greater Brechalon, populated by ladies wearing corsets and dresses with bustles, carrying parasols to keep the sun off their alabaster skin and gentlemen with very stiff upper lips driving steam powered carriages, this is a very steampunk version of an alternate Victorian England.
Steampunk however is only one of the multiple genres that are thrown into the mix. There are wizards and sorceresses, airships and analytical engines, dragons and dinosaurs, lizard men and a good old fashioned series of Jack the Ripper style murders to solve too.
Quite honestly this book should never work. There are too many things thrown into the melting pot, but somehow not only does it work, but it works wonderfully well!
It’s not all perfect though. The author clearly loves language and his use of idiomatic Victorian style English is really very good, but there are still a few occasions when you are left in no doubt that the book was written by an American author. The end of the story is also rather abrupt in my opinion and the final few paragraphs should probably have been an epilogue, but these are minor things really.
It is quite a long book being over 8000 Kindle locations and provides several hours of hugely entertaining reading. Presentation on the Kindle is excellent with good formatting and no obvious errors that I could see. The cover art is missing from the Kindle version though (although it shows up on both Kindle for PC and on my Android phone).
Overall – 5 stars! I will be reading the rest of this series very soon. I will say though that I have a huge weakness for both steampunk style books and for anything set in an alternate Victorian style setting, so you might want to download the sample and try a few pages for yourself before you decide to buy it. Personally, despite my minor petty criticisms, I absolutely loved this book!

Mr. Horrigan, who recently reviewed His Robot Wife (and is probably responsibile for a boost in sales) also reviewed The Voyage of the Minotaur.  Thanks so much for taking the time to read and review my work.  I’m very glad you liked it.

Four Star Review for Voyage of the Minotaur

Review by: Mrs Joseph on Mar. 17, 2011 :

The Voyage of the Minotaur by Wesley Allison is the steampunk version of Imperial colonization. The Dechantagne siblings – Iolanthe, Terrance, and Augie – are nobles who live in Mallontah (a country similar to colonial England). They – Iolanthe – have used all of their family’s influence and sunk their family’s fortune into a venture to colonize a newly discovered continent, Birmisia. This book covers the settlers’ voyage, landing, founding, and first interactions with Birmisia’s natives – intelligent two-legged lizard-men that the Dechantagnes’ want to use as labor and dinosaurs.

This is a new author and a new sub-genre for me, so I had no pre-conceptions prior to reading this novel. When I first started reading, I was pretty impressed. The author has a solid plot and the activity is rather interesting. The sample – about 4 chapters – was good enough that I purchased The Voyage of the Minotaur and its sequel, The Dark and Forbidding Land. Depending on how the sequel reads, I may buy book three, The Drache Girl. This is felt like a first book for Allison, but I know he has written many others. I really enjoyed this book – there is a lot of additional potential in this book (and therefore this author) that a good editor can drag out of it.

Characterization
It was after purchase that the issues of this novel started to appear. One of the first problems I had was characterization. Allison did not spend a lot of time building character – almost all of his main characters feel rather static: Iolanthe is rather cold, Augie is flighty, and Terrence is a troubled drug addict; Senta is happy-go-lucky, Zurfina the Magnificent is mysterious, etc. Allison’s secondary characters are so under developed as to be throw-aways – almost impossible to tell apart (unless you read with a moleskin and a pen :). We [the reader] aren’t really given enough information into character motivation – in addition to knowing what a character does, I also want to know why a character did it.

Pacing
I felt that there are considerable pacing issues with this novel and I think they are all based around description. Descriptive prose is very important – it allows the reader to visualize the activity occurring. While I dislike over-use of descriptive language (too much can slow a book down), this book suffers from under-use of descriptive language. Everything feels rushed – the reader isn’t given any time to savor the new experiences. One perfect example of this is the arrival of the Minotaur at Birmisia. 99.9% of the settlers are seeing Birmisia for the first time. As the ship pulls into the bay, a herd of dinosaurs (Iguanodon) are seen crossing a clearing between trees. I can only imagine the disbelief and awe a human would feel upon seeing their first live dinosaur, since the author didn’t describe it to me.

There is a lot that happens in this book. We meet lots of new people and have tons of new experiences. The writing is so tight (for lack of a better word) that, at times, I felt like I was in a race. I wanted moments to digest what I’d read and time for my heart to stop racing before being thrown into the next action or revelation.

******* START SPOILER *********
(view spoiler)[When Terrence finds out his drug of choice (White Opthalium) has been poisoned by the Wizard Kesi, he goes to confront Kesi. Terrence busts down Kesi’s door, disturbing him in the middle of committing murder. Terrence and Kesi struggle before Kesi runs away and into the forest. The reader is barely given time to digest this before we are tossed head-first into a confrontation between Kesi and Zurfina the Magnificent. I wanted to screech! My heart was already racing and he hasn’t given me a break! Thank God I’m not a stroke candidate. 🙂 (hide spoiler)]
******* END SPOILER *********

Underlying Themes
There are many underlying themes within this novel: Racism, classism, religion and religious tolerance, drug use and self-preservation. The author touches on all of these topics in a way that doesn’t broadcast his personal POV, which I appreciate. While all five of the themes were present, the two I want to focus on are drug use and self-preservation. I felt that the author did an exceptionally good job with these two.

Self-Preservation
Colonialism is defined as “a relationship between an indigenous (or forcibly imported) majority and a minority of foreign invaders. The fundamental decisions affecting the lives of the colonized people are made and implemented by the colonial rulers in pursuit of interests that are often defined in a distant metropolis. Rejecting cultural compromises with the colonized population, the colonisers are convinced of their own superiority and their ordained mandate to rule.”

This is what was planned for the native Lizard people of Birmisia. The Dechantagnes’ plan was to take over the continent of Birmisia and basically enslave the native population (in addition to converting the natives to their religion). When the Dechantagnes meet the native Birmisians, they try to get the lizard-men to change their allegiance from their native peoples to the settlers. Amongst themselves, the Dechantagne siblings and the settlers speak about how cheaply the Birmisian labor will cost (bare pennies a day).

******* START SPOILER *********
(view spoiler)[What the settlers don’t take the time to do is to reconnaissance the land or the natives. The settlers make no allowances for the possible intelligence of the natives – a huge mistake. Augie – who is the only person who speaks the native language and in charge of native communications – blithely translates words incorrectly and does not take the time to learn about the natives’ culture. These mistakes allow the native lizard-men to lure 75% of the settlers’ solider protection into a trap.

The natives, on the other hand, did take the time to learn about the settlers as well as learn their language. The lizard-men learned that the natives in Mallontah had been enslaved and that the settlers have plans to do the same to them. Out of pure self-preservation, the natives try to kill all the settlers (this does not work). I love the fact that the author attributed such intelligence, planning, and cunning to the natives. While the reader cannot help but to side with the settlers, the plight of the natives makes their actions completely understandable. (hide spoiler)]
******* END SPOILER *********

Drug Use
One of the main characters, Terrence Dechantagne, is a drug addict. He is addicted to a drug named White Opthalium. This drug is made out of a mixture of things, but what makes it potent is that it has magic in it. When Terrence uses the drug, he is transported to a land that is his alone. The only “person” in this land is an angel-like woman named “Pantagria.” Terrence has been abusing White Opthalium for many years – and Pantagria is the personification of his drug use. Terrence has allowed life and love to pass him by, as his heart belongs to the perfect Pantagria. As the novel continues, Pantagria and the land that she inhabits go from being Terrence’s “safe harbor” to a place of pain, hurt, and destruction. I love the way that Pantagria’s character is first shown from the eyes of a person who really doesn’t consider himself an addict – she is perfect and a shelter from any storm – and later shown from the eyes of someone who knows they are an addict – Pantagria is dangerous and will always cause pain.

To close everything out, I have to say that I am happy that I discovered Wesley Allison’s The Voyage of the Minotaur and I will read book 2. As my first foray into steampunk, I am relatively happy. I do believe that 100% of this novel’s issues can be corrected by a great editor. It is my hope that Allison – who is self-published – will eventually re-write this book to bring it to its full potential.

(reviewed long after purchase)

Positive Ratings by Book

One of the ideas the marketing book that I am reading had, was to figure out the percentage positive ratings.  In other words, how many of the ratings on each book were 5 or 4 stars, divided by the total number of 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 star ratings.  Here are all my ratings by book.

His Robot Girlfriend– 59% positive on 1359 ratings.
His Robot Wife– 90% positive on 116 ratings.

Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess– 62% positive on 71 ratings.
Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress — 55% positive on 44 ratings.

Senta and the Steel Dragon: Brechalon– 73% positive on 11 ratings.
Senta and the Steel Dragon: Voyage of the Minotaur– 100% positive on 4 ratings.
Senta and the Steel Dragon: The Dark and Forbidding Land– 100% positive on 3 ratings.
Senta and the Steel Dragon: The Drache Girl– 100% positive on 9 ratings.

Princess of Amathar– 86% positive on 7 ratings.

Tesla’s Stepdaughter– 0% positive on 2 ratings.  (They were both 3 stars.)

No reviews or ratings yet on:
Blood Trade
Women of Power
Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing Hoverbike.

His Robot Girlfriend – More Reader Reviews

by foober on Feedbooks.com
Gads.

There’s at least two more books in exploring this story (and ever-so-optimistic romance). Not to mention the potential conspiracy theory angle. Please don’t give up on it!
Without spoiling anything, as a father, I have to say I got tears in my eyes precisely where you expect. It did feel that this rich vein was left unexplored. What really happened?
Hats off Wesley! Very much enjoyed!

by senthusiast on Feedbooks.com
Cute story. A nice light read for me. I enjoyed it.

by: Talisman on Smashwords.com

This book is the first book that i read on my new kobo e-reader. I have to admit the story was real engaging from the very beginning. And I am glad that the story did not follow standard android type plots and moral dilemma’s (Ok maybe the main character had a little guilt about her but not much) With that said the ending was great but very fast, I am with a few questions at the end- Perhaps intended by the author – the basic question i think is it different to fall in love with a “hive” robot- or one with individual quirks and free-will?

by: Charles Brentner on Smashwords.com

I enjoyed this story. What man hasn’t wanted to have the perfect fantasy woman at one time or another. I agree that a sequel would be nice. The characters are well established in “His Robot Girlfriend” and it would be interesting to explore more of what could happen in the world that Mr. Allison has created in this book.

by Awsome on iBooks

A must read !!!  It’s also free!!!!!!

by Joel Noriel on iBooks
The book will start slow but this book really shows what the future could look like which isn’t all that much different from our own.  But it is a fantastic tale which captivated me in more ways than one.  I love this book and if there is a second book I’m sure I won’t be disaapoint.

by Me 4412 on iBooks

Couldn’t put it down.  Can’t wait for the next one!!!

Princess of Amathar – 3 1/2 of 4 Stars

A very nice and favorable review of Princess of Amathar was recently posted by James Reed on Digital Spotlight Fiction Review.

Mr. Allison mixes old and new technology in the work, so it isn’t just a “Lord of the Rings” rip-off like many others in this genre. The Amatharians are a race described as having blue skin and I immediately thought of James Cameron’s “Avatar,” which in itself was like Fern Gully and Pocahontas crossed with The Smurfs. There is enough originality in Wesley Allison’s work where it seems familiar to us, but new at the same time. There are sword battles with creatures as well as laser gun fights involving aircraft like Return of the Jedi, minus the Ewoks.

The writing style is simple, yet not without its moments of wit and genuine charm. Some may point to the simplicity of the writing to be a point for deduction, but I found it adds to the appeal of this story. There were points in Mr. Allison’s novel that reminded me of Mark Twain’s “A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.”
 
Read the entire review here: http://digitalspotlightfictionreview.blogspot.com/2010/09/good-wesley-allison.html.