When a Friend Publishes a Book: Why Honest Reviews Matter

One of the trickiest situations a writer or reviewer can find themselves in is this: a friend publishes a book, and you’re asked — directly or indirectly — to review it.

On the surface, it sounds simple. You read the book, you write your thoughts, you hit “publish.” But anyone who has spent time in the writing community, especially online, knows it’s not that straightforward. There’s an unspoken pressure to be supportive, to be kind, to be “part of the circle.” And in many corners of the internet, that pressure turns into something else entirely: a praise economy where every book is “amazing,” every debut is “phenomenal,” and every writer is “brilliant.”

The problem is that none of that helps anyone grow.

The Friendship Trap

My friend Thomas Wikman wrote a loving tribute to his Leonberger, Bronco.

(Photo by the author)

When you know the author personally — even casually — the stakes feel different. You’re not just reviewing a book; you’re reviewing someone’s dream, their effort, their vulnerability. And if you’re a decent human being, you don’t want to hurt them.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth:

Friendship doesn’t make a book better.
And friendship shouldn’t make a review dishonest.

A review isn’t a hug.
A review isn’t a pep talk.
A review isn’t a loyalty test.

A review is a reader’s honest response to a piece of writing.

If we forget that, we’re not helping our friends — we’re misleading them.

The Praise Circle Problem

Anyone who’s spent time in the blogosphere has seen it: the praise circle. A group of writers who all read each other’s work and give glowing reviews regardless of quality. It’s well‑intentioned, but it creates a bubble where:

  • weak writing is rewarded
  • honest critique is treated as betrayal
  • authors never learn what isn’t working
  • readers outside the circle feel misled

It’s a system built on politeness, not growth.

And if you’re someone who takes writing seriously — as craft, not performance — that system feels suffocating.

(C) 2026 P.J. Gudka and Wild Ink Publishing

Honesty Is Not Cruelty

When a friend asks for a review, the kindest thing you can do is tell the truth.

Not brutally.
Not gleefully.
Not with the goal of “teaching them a lesson.”

But with clarity, respect, and the understanding that writing is a lifelong apprenticeship.

Honest feedback says:

  • “I respect you enough to tell you the truth.”
  • “I believe you can handle critique.”
  • “I want your next book to be even better.”

Dishonest praise says:

  • “I don’t think you can take honesty.”
  • “I don’t believe you’ll grow.”
  • “I’m protecting your feelings, not your craft.”

One of those is friendship.
The other is condescension dressed as kindness.

When It Works

Every so often, you encounter a writer who welcomes honest critique — who doesn’t flinch, doesn’t get defensive, doesn’t retreat into the safety of the praise circle. They read your review, thank you for your time, and genuinely consider what you said.

Those are the writers who will improve.
Those are the writers who will last.

And reviewing their work — even when you have notes, even when you have reservations — feels like a real conversation between peers.

When It Doesn’t

And then there are the others.

The ones who want applause, not insight.
Validation, not evaluation.
Five stars, not feedback.

Reviewing their work honestly is a guaranteed ticket to drama, guilt‑tripping, or passive‑aggressive silence. In those cases, the best thing you can do is simply… not review the book at all.

Silence is kinder than false praise — and safer than honesty they’re not ready to hear.

The Bottom Line

Reviewing a friend’s work is hard.
But if you choose to do it, do it honestly.

Not harshly.
Not cruelly.
Not performatively.

Just honestly.

Because in the long run, honesty is the only thing that respects both the writer and the craft.


Comments

17 responses to “When a Friend Publishes a Book: Why Honest Reviews Matter”

  1. I have this exact thing to do today. I will also be putting my review on my blog and Amazon. The book was amazing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. May the wind be at your back!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. It was a very good read; only 150 pages and fast, and it was great.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I’m glad you liked your friend’s book. It is tricky, though, when it comes to reviewing something written by friends or relatives…which, of course, is the topic of my post.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. You make some great points, and I agree with you. Have a great day!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Kymber, for your kind comment.

      I started my writing career as an entertainment writer for my high school newspaper, so ethical reviewing is hard-wired into me. I either review honestly or not at all…..

      Liked by 1 person

  3. I’ve found that showing the review to or discussing it with the friend first is often helpful. I don’t want to 1) falsely praise something I didn’t like or 2) embarrass my friend. If it’s something that’s just out of left field, I say, “Perhaps someone else would be better off reviewing it.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. My policy is two-fold:

      1. Buy the book, then read it as objectively as possible.
      2. Review it honestly, trusting that the author is smart and understands that I’m not a member of a “praise circle.”

      Liked by 1 person

  4. More than once, I’ve pressed “publish” only to shortly mutter unladylike Anglo-Saxon phrases.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. That sounds a lot like my experiences with Kindle Direct Publishing!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Yes it can and we were work colleagues and I worked for her. It was a life story with a leadership theme. Quite good.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I hope your friend appreciates the review, Kevin.

      Like

  6. Hey Alex,
    I hear you on honest feedback. I’m not sure if these are reflections of what you thought of Thomas and Pooja’s books or just sharing your thoughts on writing reviews in general and their reviews are coming?

    I for one can’t review a book unless it’s a 4 or 5… reviews are so subjective.. some people will love the book and other’s have other thoughts.. I just don’t have time to read or write about them unless I love them. 💕

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This post expresses my overall philosophy on reviewing books written by friends; I already wrote one about the antipathy I feel about “praise circles” and writing positive reviews of books with obvious quality issues. I reviewed Thomas’ book about Bronco when it was published in 2022, and yesterday I wrote a review of P.J.’s Perfect.

      I have been reviewing books (and movies, and music albums, and a plethora of other things) since I was 17, and I don’t limit myself to what I like. That’s too narrow a view for me. I’m a reviewer, not a cheerleader. If I love – or like – something, I will say so. If I don’t…well, I’ll call ’em as I see ’em. And if I know I’m not going to like something anyway, I’m not going to read, watch, listen to, or play that “something.” Time’s too precious to waste on stuff I’m not keen on.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Thanks for letting me know. I must have missed those, Alex. I understand for sure. I was just confused since their books were there.

        It’s awesome you have the time to read that much and get through them with reviews that are helpful. It they don’t truly capture me, I can’t make it through since I’m so busy and I so agree “Time’s too precious to waste on stuff I’m not keen on.”

        Thanks for clarifying. ❣️

        Liked by 1 person

      2. In my case, I usually get books, movies, albums, etc. by folks I am already familiar with or are in genres that I am familiar with even though the creators may not be.

        For instance, I tend to like Superman (the character), so I try to watch movies about the Man of Steel. If I like them, as I do Superman: The Movie, I will give them positive reviews. If I don’t like them (the Zach Snyder movies, for instance), I’ll give them negative reviews that explain why they didn’t land, even though I am a Superman fan.

        I also try to be precise and honest when I review something positively. For instance, if I notice something is off in a book that I otherwise like, as is the case with Perfect, I will mention it in the critique. Giving praise without constructive criticism is not helpful to anyone. Not to the writer, especially to one who is not publishing through one of the Big Publishers. And certainly not to the readers. Sure, there are many folks who just focus on the story and characters and don’t give a rip about “the craft.” But there are far more readers who do care about such things as attribution tags that don’t disrupt the flow of the writing, the quality of the world-building, and other elements that make books work well. If the idea is good but the execution is meh, discerning readers won’t finish the book. Fair, honest reviews with constructive criticism help indie authors more than they hinder them.

        Like

      3. Oh, and I also don’t have a ton of extra time to read and write reviews these days. I’m currently working on an omnibus that collects my four current Jim Garraty stories between its covers. I’m also thinking a fifth one, but I’m not going to start it till I finish editing The Jim Garraty Chronicles. (I also have stuff to do at home…so for me, reading time is precious.)

        Like

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