May 2026
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    We trust IMDb ratings a lot for movies and shows. You kinda know what you’re getting.

    But I’m not sure the same idea even works for books.

    Reviews are everywhere — Goodreads, Amazon, blogs, Reddit threads — and most of it feels either too long, biased, or contradictory. Sometimes I wonder if “what the internet thinks” about a book is even a real thing.

    Would a short, combined take of everyone’s opinion across the internet actually help you decide what to read?

    Like
    Internet Consensus: Atomic Habits

    Overall sentiment: Very positive (≈ 8.6 / 10)

    What readers love:
    • Practical and actionable advice
    • Easy-to-understand examples
    • Habit systems over motivation

    Common criticism:
    • Ideas feel repetitive
    • Not much new for advanced readers

    Best for:
    • Beginners in self-improvement
    • People struggling with consistency

    Not ideal for:
    • Readers looking for deep psychology research

    Or would that just oversimplify books too much?

    If this wouldn’t be useful, what would help more when choosing a book?

    Longer reviews? trusted reviewers? comparisons?

    Honestly curious if this idea makes sense or not.

    by cipher_04

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    3 Comments

    1. Spiritual_Peak2448 on

      Books are way more subjective than movies tbh – like a 3-star romance might be someone’s favorite comfort read while a 5-star literary fiction puts them to sleep

      The consensus thing could work but I’d rather just find a few reviewers whose taste aligns with mine and follow them instead of trying to aggregate everything

    2. whereismydragon on

      I don’t use generic ratings or written reviews as a metric for *any* of my entertainment. I’m more likely to read (or watch, or listen to) something recommended to me by an *individual* whose taste I know and whose judgement I trust.

      Just FYI this post will most likely be removed by the mods, since it’s not a request for a book.

    3. I tend to believe trusted reviewers on Instagram i.e. people I follow because we seem to have similar taste. I know some readers only read one genre, but there are plenty who read across genres, and I have built up a relationship with them that lets me know to trust their opinion. It has taken time, but it’s worked for me.

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