Rating System Explainer

I have decided to adapt and use a rating system adapted from 2ToRamble.

Rating System Range

Star Equivalent Word
1 Awful
1.25 Very Bad
1.5 Bad
1.75 Very Flawed
2 Flawed
2.25 Very Disappointing
2.5 Disappointing
2.75 Below Average
3 Neutral
3.25 Above Average
3.5 Good
3.75 Really Good
4 Great
4.25 Really Great
4.5 Spectacular
4.75 Nearly Floored
5 Floored
N/A Not Applicable to Category

Categories

Emotional Impact:

This category looks at how much the book’s intended emotion hit you. Was the book trying to make you laugh, cry, cheer, horrified, tense, etc, and did it have that impact on you?

Note: Some people have different reactions and are less emotive, so have your 5 star vs 1 star be internally consistent with however you best express your emotional highs and lows.

Thought-Provoking:

This category explores the messages, themes, and ideas of a book. Anything and everything to do with what the book is trying to say ranging from what makes a human to what makes a good friend. Two factors are most important: the execution and the message itself. For superb execution, look into how all of the elements in the story (the plot/characters/world/etc) are interwoven to help magnify the themes of the book. Does it all resonate that these elements must be a part of this story to get across its themes? For the message itself, is it something you agree with? If you disagree, does it still make a strong case? Is it challenging?

Characters:

This category judges characters. Whether they’re static or dynamic, main or secondary, this category judges how real the characters feel. Characters could have flaws/wants/needs or could just be a one-note side character that perfectly fits their role.

Plot:

This category reviews the plot of the novel. The promise, progress, and payoff of a story. Consider the structure of the book (three acts?), the pacing, and series of events that occur. Plot holes, plot armor, and everything in between.

Worldbuilding:

Worldbuilding analyzes all the elements of the world/magic system (if applicable) and how much suspension of disbelief you have in the book. Whether it was the atmosphere, history, cultures, geography, flora, fauna, magic, setting, governments, religions, curse words, linguistics, fashion, etc… did the world allow you to escape? Does it feel real?

Prose:

Prose is a tough category to judge because different authors have such different styles. It is generally good to have an economy of words, do multiple things at once with your sentences, not be redundant, not repeat yourself, and allow the reader to actually visualize what is in the author's head. Some of the best authors in the world constantly break these ‘rules/conventions’ of writing because they deeply understand the rules and intentionally break them, but on a baseline, the most important thing is to convey to the reader what is happening in the story.

Note: Books in a foreign language that are translated into your primary tongue are more difficult to judge because of what is lost in translation. For those books, either put N/A because you cannot be a good judge of that, or clarify that you are only judging the translated prose.

Editors Note:

A lot of this text is pulled directly from the 2ToRamble explainer document, located at here. Edited only for clarity/brevity.