40quotes

Quotes about bad-reviews

In the vast landscape of opinions and experiences, "bad reviews" stand as a testament to the diverse perspectives that shape our understanding of products, services, and even life itself. This tag represents the candid, often unfiltered feedback that can be both a source of frustration and a catalyst for improvement. Bad reviews are more than just negative commentary; they are a reflection of unmet expectations and a call for change. People are drawn to quotes about bad reviews because they encapsulate the raw honesty and emotional responses that resonate with our own experiences. These quotes often provide a sense of validation, reminding us that we are not alone in our disappointments and that our voices matter. They also offer a unique lens through which we can view the world, encouraging us to embrace criticism as an opportunity for growth and transformation. Whether you're seeking solace in shared grievances or looking for inspiration to turn criticism into constructive action, quotes about bad reviews offer a compelling glimpse into the human experience, highlighting the power of words to influence, challenge, and ultimately, inspire change.

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I never read bad reviews about myself, because my friends invariably tell me about them.
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Sometimes it can be useful to read your bad reviews.
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Worse than bad reviews is to be ignored.
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At a conservative estimate, one million dollars will be spent by American readers for this book [For Whom the Bell Tolls]. They will get for their money 34 pages of permanent value. These 34 pages tell of a massacre happening in a little Spanish town in the early days of the Civil War...Mr. Hemingway: please publish the massacre scene separately, and then forget For Whom the Bell Tolls; please leave stories of the Spanish Civil War to Malraux...
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[On Wuthering Heights] Here, all the faults of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë are magnified a thousand fold, and the only consolation which we have in reflecting upon it is that it will never be generally read.[North British Review, 1847]
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Monsieur Flaubert is not a writer. [1857]
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Seriously, I do not know what to say of this book [ Absalom, Absalom!] except that it seem to point to the final blowup of what was once a remarkable, if minor, talent… this is a penny dreadful tricked up in fancy language and given a specious depth by the expert manipulation of a series of eccentric technical tricks. The characters have no magnitude and no meaning because they have no more reality than a mince-pie nightmare.
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[About John Updike's Rabbit Run] The author fails to convince us that his puppets are interesting in themselves, or that their plight has implications that transcend their narrow world.
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[Leaves of Grass is] monstrous because it pretends to persuade the soul while it slights the intellect; because it pretends to gratify the feelings while it outrages the taste.
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[Middlemarch] is a treasure-house of details, but it is an indifferent whole.
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