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Steven erikson malazan book of the fallen goodreads
Steven erikson malazan book of the fallen goodreads








There aren’t many similar sources for people dropping books. Rowling!-but also totally misleading, since the bookshelf page only shows books sorted by total tags per book. A (former) GoodReads user myself⁠, I came across that tag and thought to myself that the results were amusing-take that, both highschool English class & J. Its functionality is limited, but GoodReads does support user-set tags on books in the form of ‘bookshelves’ one such tag is the GR “abandoned” bookshelf 1⁠, which lets people record which books they couldn’t finish reading. eliminating the API access which allowed users to escape to better book websites like LibraryThing) nevertheless, it remains the largest book website and some interesting data can be extracted from it. (I was surprised when, reading writer interviews to learn about preferred writing times⁠, how many have given interviews to GoodReads over the years.) I do not recommend GoodReads as it is extremely slow, largely unmaintained post-acquisition, and user-hostile (eg. The book review website/​social network GoodReads (2006–) is probably the single largest book-focused website in the Anglosphere-it is almost as widely used by authors, who as much as they may despise it, can’t live without it.

steven erikson malazan book of the fallen goodreads

These results are interesting for how they highlight how people read books for many reasons (such as marketing campaigns, literary prestige, or following a popular author), and this is reflected in their decision whether to continue reading or to abandon a book.

steven erikson malazan book of the fallen goodreads

Theft by Finding: Diaries (1977–2002), David Sedarisīooks at the top of the adjusted list appear to reflect a mix of highly-popular authors changing genres, and ‘prestige’ books which are highly-rated but a slog to read.Abandon rates increase the newer a book is, and the lower the average rating. I also consider a model adjusting for covariates (author/​average-rating/​year), to see what books are most surprisingly often-abandoned given their pedigrees & rating etc. The Witches: Salem, 1692⁠, Stacy Schiff.I fix that to see what more correct rankings look like.Ĭorrecting for both changes the top-5 ranking completely, from ( raw counts): There is also residual error from the winner’s curse where books with fewer ratings are more mis-estimated than popular books.

steven erikson malazan book of the fallen goodreads

This conflates popularity with probability of being abandoned: a popular but rarely-abandoned book may have more abandoned tags than a less popular but often-abandoned book. The default GoodReads tag interface presents only raw counts of tags, not counts divided by total ratings ( = reads). What books are hardest for a reader who starts them to finish, and most likely to be abandoned? I scrape a crowdsourced tag⁠, abandoned, from the GoodReads book social network on to estimate conditional probability of being abandoned.










Steven erikson malazan book of the fallen goodreads