Avid readers in your genre

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Non-disclosure agreement

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No Artificial Intelligence

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$2 per 1000 words

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All beta feedback in one place

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Avid readers in your genre | Non-disclosure agreement | No Artificial Intelligence | $2 per 1000 words | All beta feedback in one place |

Beta Reader Questionnaire

Your honest, specific responses are invaluable. There are no wrong answers; even negative feedback helps the author improve the work. Write as much or as little as feels right.

📝 Section 1: Reader Profile

Helps the author interpret your feedback through the right lens.

  1. What genres do you typically read?

  2. How often do you read fiction?

  3. What are 2–3 books you've loved recently?

  4. What are 1–2 books you didn't enjoy, and why?

  5. Age range:

  6. Gender:

🎯 Section 2: First Impressions & Overall Experience

Gut reactions matter. Capture your overall sense of the reading experience before diving into specifics.

  1. How would you describe this book to a friend, in two or three sentences, as if recommending (or not recommending) it?

  2. Rate your overall enjoyment of the manuscript. (1 = Couldn't finish it, 5 = Couldn't put it down)

  3. What did you enjoy the most?

  4. What didn't work for you?

  5. At any point, did you consider stopping? If yes, where and why?

  6. What book, movie, or TV series comes to your mind when reading this book?

  7. What type of reader would love this book?

🚪 Section 3: Opening

Help the author understand whether the opening pages would compel a reader to keep going.

  1. Were the first paragraphs and first page compelling? Did they make you want to keep reading? If not, what was the problem?

  2. Did you get oriented fairly quickly at the beginning as to whose story it is, what's going on, and where and when it's taking place? If not, what were you confused about?

  3. Did the story continue to hold your interest through the first few chapters? Or is there a point where your interest started to lag?

📖 Section 4: Plot, Pacing, and Structure

Help the author understand whether the story's architecture is working—pacing, clarity, and momentum.

  1. Did the plot hold your interest from beginning to end? Where did it drag, if anywhere?

  2. Did the stakes feel clear and compelling?

  3. Was there any point where you felt confused about what was happening, or lost track of the story?

  4. Were there parts that felt rushed or underdeveloped?

  5. Were the twists predictable, surprising, or confusing?

  6. Were there any plot holes, discrepancies, or inconsistencies you noticed?

  7. List up to 3 favorite scenes (and why they worked).

  8. List up to 3 least favorite scenes (and why they didn't work).

  9. Did the ending feel satisfying? Why or why not?

👤 Section 5: Characters

Characters are often the emotional engine of fiction. Identify what's working and what isn't.

  1. Which character did you connect with the most? Why?

  2. Which character did you struggle to connect with? Why?

  3. Did any character feel unrealistic, inconsistent, or hard to distinguish from others?

  4. Were character motivations clear throughout?

  5. Did the protagonist's arc feel believable? Did their decisions and growth make sense given who they are?

  6. Did the antagonist feel like a real threat?

  7. Were the relationships between characters believable?

  8. Were there any characters you wanted more or less of?

🧠 Section 6: Themes & Emotional Resonance

What the story is really about, and whether it landed emotionally.

  1. What do you think this story is about, thematically, beneath the plot? What did you take away from it?

  2. Did the story move you emotionally? Which moments hit hardest, and which fell flat, especially ones that should have had emotional impact but didn't?

  3. Did anything feel preachy, heavy-handed, or like the author was pushing a message too hard?

✍️ Section 7: Writing Style & Clarity

The sentence-level experience of the story i.e. how the author's style and voice landed for you as a reader.

  1. How would you describe the writing style (e.g., immersive, simple, dense)?

  2. Do you think the writing style fits the story and genre? If not, why not?

  3. Were there passages that pulled you out of the story?

  4. Were descriptions too much, too little, or just right?

  5. Did the dialogue feel natural and believable?

  6. Were there any repetitive phrases, clichés, or awkward lines that stood out?

🌍 Section 8: World & Setting

Evaluate how well the author grounds the reader in the physical, social, and sensory world of the story.

  1. Did the setting feel vivid and believable?

  2. Were there any details that felt unclear or inconsistent?

🏁 Section 9: Big Picture Feedback

Anything that didn't fit above and your most important parting thoughts.

  1. Is there anything the author is clearly doing well that they should protect and not change?

  2. If you could change one thing about the book, what would it be?

  3. How likely are you to recommend this book to a friend? (0 = Not at all likely, 10 = Extremely likely) And what is the primary reason for your score?

  4. Is there anything else you want the author to know: questions you had as a reader, things that nagged at you, or anything we didn't ask?

Lets Get Started

Share a few details and our team will respond within 24 hours, ensuring your manuscript receives the readers it deserves.