Showing posts with label suspense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suspense. Show all posts

Monday, December 5, 2016

Fantasy Patch by Steven Geez - Book Trailer

I make no comments or opinions about the book since I have not read it. What I write is about the trailer only.

The book trailer for Fantasy Patch by Steven Geez is the silliest thing I've seen in a long time. I think it may actually be a joke. Maybe a satire of book trailers?

This thing is all over the place with no theme, countless unrelated images, video clips, goofy special effects, varied fonts, and the dreaded voice-over. Adding so many elements is distracting, rendering this trailer as comical and ineffective.

I still don't know what the book is about, but I did get a good laugh. That is what they were going for, right?


Friday, November 11, 2016

Cruel Awakening by Zena Xenae - Book Trailer

I make no comments or opinions about this book since I have not read it. What I write is about the trailer only.

In under 25 seconds this trailer tells us ... um ... not much.

I was able to quickly read a few words when the book opened in the video, so was able to see that it's about abuse.

It's a good-looking trailer, but lacks in creating any real interest.





THE WIDOW by Fiona Barton - Book Trailer

I make no comments or opinions about this book since I have not read it. What I write is about the trailer only.

Here is a sure-fire formula for an effective book trailer:

Start with a three-sentence premise. Also known as "the elevator pitch."

Then, use any great quotes from good reviews in a clean typeface. If you're lucky, the words of the reviewer can describe what your book is about so much better than piecing together a bunch of images or video clips you've purchased from a site like Shutterstock.

Use one background image that sets the tone for your trailer and matches your carefully selected musical score.

Be sure to show your book cover at the end.

Make your video under one minute long.

And there you have it, the book trailer to The Widow by Fiona Barton.