This post is inspired by Zuky and Janel!
Every book blogger will have stories of when NetGalley declined their requests for books. It usually starts when you first join, especially if you are click happy with your mouse, like I was! After you’ve been a member for a while and your ratio improves, the declines decrease and you find your NetGalley happy spot. 🙂
Here are three books I was disappointed to have been declined in the last year since I’ve been a member.
Dracula vs Hitler by Patrick Sheane Duncan
Ravaged by the Nazi Secret Service during World War II, Romanian resistance forces turn to one of their leaders, Professor Van Helsing for any way out. To fight these monstrous forces, Van Helsing raises a legendary monster from centuries of slumber… Prince Dracula himself. Once he was the ruler of Transylvania. Prince Vlad Dracul, is, above all else, a patriot. He proves more than willing to once again drive out his country’s invaders. Upshot: No one minds if he drinks all the German blood he desires. In Berlin, when Hitler hears about the many defeats his forces are suffering at the hands of an apparent true vampire, he is seduced by the possibility of becoming immortal. Thus two forces are set upon a collision course, the ultimate confrontation: Superpower against superpower
I remember being quite excited by this book when I requested it, but I’m not surprised I was declined as it’s not a genre I would normally read. I still think it looks like a fun read though.
Lucky Boy by Shanthi Sekaran
A heart-wrenching novel that gives voice to two mothers: a young undocumented Mexican woman and an Indian-American wife whose love for one lucky boy will bind their fates together
Solimar Castro-Valdez is eighteen and drunk on optimism when she embarks on a perilous journey across the US/Mexican border. Weeks later she arrives on her cousin’s doorstep in Berkeley, CA, dazed by first love found then lost, and pregnant. This was not the plan. But amid the uncertainty of new motherhood and her American identity, Soli learns that when you have just one precious possession, you guard it with your life. For Soli, motherhood becomes her dwelling and the boy at her breast her hearth. Kavya Reddy has always followed her heart, much to her parents’ chagrin. A mostly contented chef at a UC Berkeley sorority house, the unexpected desire to have a child descends like a cyclone in Kavya’s mid-thirties. When she can’t get pregnant, this desire will test her marriage, it will test her sanity, and it will set Kavya and her husband, Rishi, on a collision course with Soli, when she is detained and her infant son comes under Kavya’s care. As Kavya learns to be a mother–the singing, story-telling, inventor-of-the-universe kind of mother she fantasized about being–she builds her love on a fault line, her heart wrapped around someone else’s child.
As a private banker working for the largest bank in the world, UBS, Bradley Birkenfeld was an expert in Switzerland’s shell-game of offshore companies and secret numbered accounts. He wined and dined ultra wealthy clients whose millions of dollars were hidden away from business partners, spouses, and tax authorities. As his client list grew, Birkenfeld lived a life of money, fast cars, and beautiful women, but when he discovered that UBS was planning to betray him, he blew the whistle to the US Government. The Department of Justice scorned Birkenfeld’s unprecedented whistle-blowing and attempted to silence him with a conspiracy charge. Yet Birkenfeld would not be intimidated. He took his secrets to the US Senate, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Internal Revenue Service, where he prevailed.
His bombshell revelations helped the US Treasury recover over $15 billion (and counting) in back taxes, fines, and penalties from American tax cheats. But Birkenfeld was shocked to discover that at the same time he was cooperating with the US Government, the Department of Justice was still doggedly pursuing him. He was arrested and served thirty months in federal prison. When he emerged, the Internal Revenue Service gave him a whistle-blower award for $104 million, the largest such reward in history. A page-turning real-life thriller, Lucifer’s Banker is a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at the secret Swiss high-net worth banking industry and a harrowing account of our government’s justice system. Readers will follow Birkenfeld and share his outrage with the incompetence and possible corruption at the Department of Justice, and they will cheer him on as he “hammers” one of the most well-known and powerful banks in the world.
Dracula vs Hitler!?!?!?! Why haven’t I heard of this book before!!!! It looks awesome!!! 🙂
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Doesn’t it and I’m surprised you haven’t read it!
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I hadn’t heard of it! I want it but it’s nearly £20 on Amazon!😢
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What a shame. Perhaps you could the author and see if he’ll send you a copy to review and spark so more interest in it?
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I doubt that would happen, it’s a weird publisher, yes, I looked at the publisher to see if I could request it.😂 They are similar to an indie publisher or kickstarter and the author has to get 750 pre-orders before they will print and publish the book! Hopefully it’ll come down in price in the next few months, I’m happy to pay but £20 is a bit steep for me when it’s not an author or series I read and know.
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Fair enough. I had a look on Waterstones Marketplace and they were a similar price, so probably not many of them around at the mo.
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True, the publisher does mention e-books so the Kindle version might appear too. So many books as it is!😂
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Tell me about it! lol
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Great post! I’ve never heard of any of these books before. The Dracula vs Hitler one sounds pretty damn cool!
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Thanks I think they are probably about a year old, so all archived now!
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Have you gone on to purchase any of them?
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No although I did add Lucky Boy to my Waterstones wishlist.
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ooh i dislike the no email you get sent from netgalley!! I have been known to then boycott that particular book as my form of revenge for getting turned down!! bitter?! me?! lol!!
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hahaha never!
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The dreaded no email! I hates those! Makes me want to cry into my cornflakes! 😂😂
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Hahaha brilliant!
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🤣
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This is such a fun idea for a post, Dracula vs Hitler’s the most interesting book there!
Oh NetGalley! What a wonderful place to feel rejected, I got quite worked up about it the first time I used NetGalley and was refused a book by Bloomsbury, then it happened again and I started to wonder if the publisher just hated my blog, lol. I also was once rejected for part 2 of a four part book after being approved book 1-guess they didn’t like my positive review! :p
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I know it’s so personal in the beginning and embarrassing thinking of what you’ve done to be rejected! lol
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This post is a great idea! And those denials SUCK and kind of hurt my heart sometimes. haha! -Ashley
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Thanks glad you enjoyed it 😀
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How has the film rights never been sold to Dracula vs. Hilter???? Missed opportunity I’d say.
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Absolutely!
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I was always crushed when I was denied because I only request the titles I really want. Then my TBR exploded and I found myself praying that a few would be denied haha. I still have a few pending that they must have forgotten. I wish you could go in and cancel requests.
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Same here in the beginning it feels so personal doesn’t it! I’d love to go in in delete quite a few requests lol
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LOL it feels very personal.. now I am looking at my stack and telling myself it is for the better haha.
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😀
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The hitler vs Dracula one looks good and Lucifer’s Bankers, too.. I love a good, controversial nonfiction book about banking just to make me more depressed about the systems we live in 😀
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Hahahaha yess!!!
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