What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Washington
(I apologize if this is a duplicate post, but it didn't show up the first time I posted)
I have written a long critique of a new book, and have been posting it chapter by chapter on my website. The book was published this year, and it's a book about learning foreign languages. Although few if any of the isolated ideas are original, the way he combines them to create his "method" is unique.
The book is about 250 pages. My critique is about 15 pages long, with about 5 pages of quoting or close-paraphrasing. At one point I summarize the "heart" of his method into one short paragraph, about 50 words.
Getting the author's permission is out of the question. The review is 5% information, 5% positive comments and 90% negative comments. He will not like the review.
Question: Does this sound like fair use?
(I apologize if this is a duplicate post, but it didn't show up the first time I posted)
I have written a long critique of a new book, and have been posting it chapter by chapter on my website. The book was published this year, and it's a book about learning foreign languages. Although few if any of the isolated ideas are original, the way he combines them to create his "method" is unique.
The book is about 250 pages. My critique is about 15 pages long, with about 5 pages of quoting or close-paraphrasing. At one point I summarize the "heart" of his method into one short paragraph, about 50 words.
Getting the author's permission is out of the question. The review is 5% information, 5% positive comments and 90% negative comments. He will not like the review.
Question: Does this sound like fair use?