OK, I think this needs a discussion: cookbook reviews on Amazon or elsewhere that make you scratch your head. :) I don't BUY books on Amazon, but I do read the reviews there to help me decide what to buy or order at my local bookshop, and there seem to be, among all the really useful reviews, certain types of not-so-useful reviews that just keep popping up:
--The ones that give one star because the book wasn't packaged properly by Amazon and the cover is sticky or the corner is dinged or what have you.
--The ones that say it's a great book with terrific recipes and wonderful photos but then subtract two or three stars because it uses a lot of a particular ingredient that the reviewer deeply dislikes, even if it's a very typical ingredient in the cuisine featured in the book (e.g. "I love this Mexican cookbook, but three stars because she uses cilantro!")
--The reviews from someone with a specific diet slamming the book because it's not much use to people who follow that diet, even though it doesn't claim to be. The most common one I've seen is that a book with a big slab of meat on the cover isn't vegan-friendly enough, but I've seen keto and paleo folks with similar complaints for cookbooks that never claimed to be keto, paleo, vegan, etc. I have a lot of vegetarian cookbooks, and I've seen a number of them get bad reviews for not having any meat, so it goes both ways.
Anyone else have any book review characteristics that leave you kind of puzzled? :)