psychotick
Auror
Hi,
Yes I think there often is envy at work. Yet I think there is also genuine confusion about why certain books succeed where others fail. And it's all part of this myth that authors live with that if a book is good it will sell / be picked up etc.
The painful truth is that there is far more luck involved in this business than people want to accept. Good books / great books fall by the wayside and often mediocre ones fly. The horrid truth is that you might write the best book ever written and it'll never be picked up or sell. The odds are against you. But at the same time other books with half so much effort put into them will absolutely rocket.
Everyone mentions Twilight and Fifty shades as examples of the latter. And maybe they're right - I don't know - I've read neither. In my world they are both works that make me violently ill at fifty paces. But what happened with both these works is that they reached audiences that other books didn't reach - tween girls and frustrated housewives bored with basic romance. So while as a red neck guy I can't possibly find any merit in them and feel nauseas just talking about them, my vote doesn't count.
There's luck in that. Timing especially. Fifty shades would not have succeeded twenty years ago. The audience just wouldn't have been there. Housewives - in my humble opinion - weren't that jaded with what they were reading. And Wool - the Hugh Howie success succeeded because of happenstance as well. His book was picked up and tweeted about by a celeb and that blew his sales out of the water.
At the same time other books fail for luck. Alexie Panshin wrote a trilogy of books starting with Starwell, which are in my opinion, some of best comic narratives ever written. They were a commercial failure. His other book Rite of Passage did much better, but isn't a comic masterpiece. Then Harrison came along with the Stainless Steel Rat and which is amazingly similar to Starwell and sold big. The books are much the same in plot and characterization, the worlds too. The writing is almost a carbon copy. The difference is the twenty years between when they were published. Between the sixties and the eighties. (By the way I recommend them all.)
Anyway that's just my tuppence worth - and I'm sure many of you would want your money back!
Cheers, Greg.
Yes I think there often is envy at work. Yet I think there is also genuine confusion about why certain books succeed where others fail. And it's all part of this myth that authors live with that if a book is good it will sell / be picked up etc.
The painful truth is that there is far more luck involved in this business than people want to accept. Good books / great books fall by the wayside and often mediocre ones fly. The horrid truth is that you might write the best book ever written and it'll never be picked up or sell. The odds are against you. But at the same time other books with half so much effort put into them will absolutely rocket.
Everyone mentions Twilight and Fifty shades as examples of the latter. And maybe they're right - I don't know - I've read neither. In my world they are both works that make me violently ill at fifty paces. But what happened with both these works is that they reached audiences that other books didn't reach - tween girls and frustrated housewives bored with basic romance. So while as a red neck guy I can't possibly find any merit in them and feel nauseas just talking about them, my vote doesn't count.
There's luck in that. Timing especially. Fifty shades would not have succeeded twenty years ago. The audience just wouldn't have been there. Housewives - in my humble opinion - weren't that jaded with what they were reading. And Wool - the Hugh Howie success succeeded because of happenstance as well. His book was picked up and tweeted about by a celeb and that blew his sales out of the water.
At the same time other books fail for luck. Alexie Panshin wrote a trilogy of books starting with Starwell, which are in my opinion, some of best comic narratives ever written. They were a commercial failure. His other book Rite of Passage did much better, but isn't a comic masterpiece. Then Harrison came along with the Stainless Steel Rat and which is amazingly similar to Starwell and sold big. The books are much the same in plot and characterization, the worlds too. The writing is almost a carbon copy. The difference is the twenty years between when they were published. Between the sixties and the eighties. (By the way I recommend them all.)
Anyway that's just my tuppence worth - and I'm sure many of you would want your money back!
Cheers, Greg.