Late last week, the YA found itself in disarray following allegations of an author several other authors in the community. The end result has seen writer Cait Corrain lose her deal with Del Rey Publishing, and other partnerships she had in the works also canceled. Let’s back up a bit: Corrain is an author whose debut novel, was intended for release on May 14, 2024; per Goodreads, it’s a “steamy, sci-fi reimagining” of the story of Greek gods Dionysus and Ariadne.
The controversy began on social media, where community members like author claimed than an unnamed author was penning one-star reviews for books by debut authors of color on Goodreads. These reviews had been appearing over the last several months from six Goodreads accounts that were also spotted liking one another’s reviews. The reviews—which included takes on and Molly X.
Chang’s —included turns of phrase like “it’s so bad, I’m writing a review about it,” and questioned publisher Del Rey’s choice of debuts to invest in. While opted to not name the author so everyone could resolve the matter privately, things reached a point where that was basically no longer an option. After their post, it didn’t take long for users to deduce that Corrain was behind the one-star reviews.
A publicly available Google doc titled “Review Bomb Receipts” tallied of evidence showing the Goodreads accounts, and how they were all linked together through individual user-made lists that seemed to keep track of debut authors whose works were releasing in 2024. As Zhao notes, some accounts used to give these reviews had user names that were “ ” (including Oh Se-Young, also the name of a well-known South Korean actress). And if that didn’t give it away, the accounts had Corrain’s own book listed as their favorite upcoming titles; some even gave the book five stars.
After the Goodreads accounts were discovered, Corrain—speaking in a Slack chat for debut authors, —claimed she had evidence linking the review bombing to her friend “Lilly. ” That evidence consisted of Slack and Discord screenshots of conversations in which “Lilly” admitted she wrote the negative reviews because Corrain had previously named books she thought would steal her own debut’s thunder; onlookers suspected either the pair were in on it together or Corrain was just talking to herself. Either way, the authors wanted to reach out to “Lilly,” but Corrain wasn’t forthcoming with ways to do that.
What she reveal is that (those who ship Kylo Ren and Rey from )—an oddly specific detail that blew up in her face almost immediately, after and agreed that particular person didn’t seem to exist among their ranks. Ultimately, Corrain’s now been dropped by her agent , and has been completely pulled from 2024 publishing slate. Further, the book subscription service will no longer carry in its May 2024 box.
If the author herself has commented on the matter, it’s unclear, as her entire social media presence is now locked and has been since Zhao’s allegations last week. Perhaps even weirder than the Reylo connection is the fact that before all this came to light, Corrain was in an enviable position: had gotten positive early reviews from those who’d read it, and she had a two-book deal with Del Rey. As of now, her future in the publishing world seems unclear; io9 reached out to Del Rey for comment and will update if and when we hear back.
For those curious, the list of review-bombed books and their release dates are as follows: (January 16, 2024); ; (March 5); by Molly X. Chang (April 16); and (August 13). , and.
From: gizmodotech
URL: https://gizmodo.com/cait-corrain-crown-of-starlight-controversy-explainer-1851090312