stephenspower
Inkling
Writing in a lot of ways is irrelevant to whether a book sells. It's often about the breaks.
Both Twilight and The Inheritance Cycle had large audiences the authors built up before traditional publishers took them on, Twilight online (like its redheaded stepchild 50 Shades of Grey) and Inheritance thanks to the author's parents devoting themselves and lots of money to author appearances and getting the self-pubd book in front of readers (his agent told me this is why he courted them, just as Richard Paul Evans and James Redfield had been courted a decade before). They deserve their success, whatever you think of the writing itself. They made their own breaks.
So did Ray Bradbury. After his editor told him how to turn his Mars stories into a novel the editor would call The Martian Chronicles, the book was published to resounding silence. But, as he relates in the intro to the graphic novel version, one day Bradbury happened to meet Christopher Isherwood, whom he gave a copy of his novel. Isherwood was gracious, but Bradbury could tell he couldn't care less. Nonetheless, three days later Isherwood called Bradbury, told him loved the book and said he would review it. And that started it down the road to becoming a classic.
So instead of being jealous of others' success or, worse, trying to figure out how to replicate it as if publishing were a cargo cult, authors should ask, How can I make my own break?
They should also keep writing. Dan Brown's first three books sold nothing. Now they've sold tens of millions thanks to Da Vinci Code selling north of 80 million copies.
Both Twilight and The Inheritance Cycle had large audiences the authors built up before traditional publishers took them on, Twilight online (like its redheaded stepchild 50 Shades of Grey) and Inheritance thanks to the author's parents devoting themselves and lots of money to author appearances and getting the self-pubd book in front of readers (his agent told me this is why he courted them, just as Richard Paul Evans and James Redfield had been courted a decade before). They deserve their success, whatever you think of the writing itself. They made their own breaks.
So did Ray Bradbury. After his editor told him how to turn his Mars stories into a novel the editor would call The Martian Chronicles, the book was published to resounding silence. But, as he relates in the intro to the graphic novel version, one day Bradbury happened to meet Christopher Isherwood, whom he gave a copy of his novel. Isherwood was gracious, but Bradbury could tell he couldn't care less. Nonetheless, three days later Isherwood called Bradbury, told him loved the book and said he would review it. And that started it down the road to becoming a classic.
So instead of being jealous of others' success or, worse, trying to figure out how to replicate it as if publishing were a cargo cult, authors should ask, How can I make my own break?
They should also keep writing. Dan Brown's first three books sold nothing. Now they've sold tens of millions thanks to Da Vinci Code selling north of 80 million copies.