In our January "how can we help you?" thread, a reader writes:
I know you guys have done posts on book reviews in the past. However, I've looked through a number of journals and all of them do not accept unsolicited proposals for book reviews. Do you have any advice for how a PhD student is to go about publishing an unsolicited book review in a decent journal?
What do you all think? I suspect the thing to do here is to just contact the journal (though some journals state on their website that they don't accept unsolicited reviews). Also, although the OP didn't ask about this, I'd personally caution grad students against publishing book reviews. Why? The short answer is that they don't add much (if anything) to one's CV as far as the job market is concerned, and they can be a real distraction from things that matters far more for the market: publishing original work and developing as a teacher. I knew some fellow students in grad school who published book reviews but little else, and it seemed to pretty clearly be a mistake. Book reviews take a lot of time. You have to read an entire book carefully, summarize relevant parts of it, and then critically engage with the arguments. While this can of course be a good exercise and service to the discipline, my worry again is that it's probably not worth the opportunity costs and tradeoffs. But these are just my thoughts, fwiw.
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