
You can’t just cut the price of your book to get on BookBub, it has to be a limited time offer. Thankfully this kind of offer also encourages potential buyers to get a move on.īookBub demands error free manuscripts and professional, appealing covers.
Bookpedia vs librarian full#
They’ll only feature full length novels of 150 pages or over.

While they will allow deviation from these rules for exceptional cases they’re a popular service and not starved for offers, so they’re unlikely to be flexible unless you’re currently the hottest thing on Amazon. BookGorillaīookGorilla is quality obsessed, advertising the best of the best, and has stringent requirements for listing. If your book has less than a 4-star rating or fewer than 5 reviews on its U.S. Kindle store page, you should expect it to be rejected. They’re less offer obsessed than BookBub but they still want to find their readership bargains, so they won’t accept any books within 30 days of a price raise. Short novels are accepted, they’ll advertise books of 100 pages and up, but they won’t tolerate any errors in your manuscript. The Fussy Librarian lives up to its name, aiming to offer finely tailored recommendations to its readers.

To this end it has some of the most stringent quality measures around.ġ0 reviews and a 4.0 rating on Amazon or Barnes and Noble or 20 reviews and a 3.5 rating if you have 10 reviews split between Amazon’s various stores. Part of why they’re so exacting in their requirements is that they make no promises to read the books they recommend. They encourage customers to report poor quality books or those which describe themselves inaccurately.
