Earlier this year, I gave a book a one star review.
Not a soft, “maybe two if I’m being kind” kind of one star either. A full-on, unapologetic this was terrible one star review. The writing was clunky, the plot was incoherent, and by the halfway mark, I was actively rooting for the end (and not in a good way).
At that stage in my reading journey, my OCD simply would not allow me to not finish a book, although it was a close call! It feels like failure, like I might miss a turn of events if I don’t continue and somehow the book might improve? So I pushed through, page by painful page, dragging my poor brain through the swamp. Honestly, that one star was generous considering I actually finished it.
If I had today’s mindset, the one that knows life’s too short and the TBR is endless; I’d have DNF’d it the moment it became problematic and unreadable. But back then, I persevered… and regretted every chapter.
Then I went online and saw glowing 4 and 5-star reviews, overflowing with praise. For a moment, I genuinely questioned my own reading ability. Had we even read the same book? Was I missing something? Or… and here’s the uncomfortable question… does receiving a free book sometimes change how people perceive it?
🕯️ The ARC Paradox
For anyone who doesn’t live in the world of NetGalley, Edelweiss, or publisher proofs; ARCs (Advanced Reader Copies) are early editions of books sent to reviewers in exchange for honest feedback.
That’s the keyword here: honest.
In theory, it’s a brilliant system. Bloggers and reviewers alike help generate buzz before release day, publishers get early visibility, and readers get valuable insight.
But somewhere along the process the lines start blurring.
I’ve noticed a pattern (not universal, but frequent enough to notice) where some reviewers seem more focused on keeping ARC access than keeping their integrity. Suddenly, every book is “the best thing I’ve read all year.” Every author is “an instant buy.” Reviews begin to sound less like opinions and more like marketing material.
Let’s be realistic and statistically speaking, not every book can be amazing. Right?
🕵️♀️ Why Some Bloggers Inflate ARC Reviews
It’s not usually publishers waving a magic wand and demanding 5 stars. Most of the time, the push comes from the system itself and the way we, as reviewers, perceive it. Here’s the truth:
Access equals approval. ARCs are limited, and if you’ve spent months building a good track record on NetGalley or Edelweiss, a harsh review can feel risky. A glowing review? Safe. Keeps the freebies coming. Even if no one told you to inflate your stars, the system nudges you that way.
Social media pressure. Seeing other bloggers unbox shiny ARCs and gush about them can make you feel like you’re missing out. Or worse, that you’re the party pooper. That fear of being “out of sync” with the hype can soften your reviews more than you’d like.
Fear of backlash. Some books generate passionate communities. Giving a lower rating can feel like starting drama. It’s easier to give 4 or 5 stars than risk confrontation, even if the book wasn’t great.
The “maybe I’m wrong” trap. When a book is hyped everywhere, it’s easy to second-guess yourself. “Everyone else seems to love it… am I missing something?” Suddenly, your honest opinion gets tempered by doubt.
The takeaway? It’s rarely about publishers actively telling bloggers to give 5 stars. It’s a mix of system pressure, social influence, and human psychology. The solution? Honesty with context. Give your opinion, explain why, and don’t let hype or fear of losing ARC access compromise your integrity. That’s how you build trust; with readers, with yourself, and yes, even with publishers.
📦 The Pressure to Please
And honestly, I get it.
Your reviewer ratio starts feeling like a credit score. You worry that a negative review might quietly impact future approvals. Meanwhile, everyone else is posting those stunning proofs with gold foiling and sprayed edges, and you want in on the excitement.
But where’s the line between enthusiasm and performance?
When we start sugar coating poor writing or pretending a weak plot “just wasn’t for me” purely because it was free, we’re no longer reviewing, we’re advertising. And the irony is, publishers don’t actually want that. Most of them would rather read a thoughtful, balanced critique than a hollow five-star rave.
🖋️ Why Honesty Matters
A dishonest review helps no one.
It doesn’t help the author grow.
It doesn’t help readers make informed decisions.
And it certainly doesn’t help the reviewer build credibility.
I’ll always respect someone who says, “This book wasn’t for me, and here’s why”, far more than someone who gushes purely to stay in a publisher’s good books.
If I didn’t enjoy something, I’ll tell you and more importantly, I’ll tell you why. I’ll show you the pacing issues, the inconsistent characterisation, the lazy tropes, the moments that lost me. Because that’s what readers deserve: honesty, not performance.
Singing praises for a poorly written book just isn’t cricket.
💬 The Bottom Line
I understand the thrill of receiving an ARC. That email notification, that feeling of trust, that early access buzz. But free books shouldn’t buy silence.
If I loved it, I’ll shout about it.
If I hated it, I’ll explain why. Clearly, kindly, but truthfully.
Because at the end of the day, the only thing more valuable than an ARC is authenticity.
And that’s something no publisher can send in a padded envelope.
Until next time… Keep reading honestly, and don’t be afraid to tip the scale 🖤






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