Originally posted by Jonathan
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What are you reading now?
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I suppose the answer to that question is that this depends on one's reasons for writing a novel in the first place. Money? Celebrity? A contribution to literary art?
On the other hand I expect that you will have received encouragement and appreciation from your friends. If I were you I would value that, and it might encourage me to try again.
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There are many novelists whose first two or three novels sold poorly, but when a later novel had big sales,the early novels started selling better too. This happened to Virginia Woolf , for instance.
A curious thing I've noticed is that later, successful (in terms of sales and readership) novels tend to be disparaged by critics. Virginia's The Years, Conrad's Chance, and Turgenev's Virgin Soil all had noticeably better sales than their earlier books but have a poor critical reputation. They're all favourite 're-reads' of mine.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I suppose the answer to that question is that this depends on one's reasons for writing a novel in the first place. Money? Celebrity? A contribution to literary art?
Secretly, I'd hoped someone would have contacted me about turning it into a TV series and then I could give up work and write. Dreams....
Thanks for your kind words Padraig, yes my friends have been most encouraging and I will write book 3 and finish the trilogy (although it might turn into a quadrology) but the problem is now with a stressful job I've not had any inclination to continue the story. Life gets in the way!Best regards,
Jonathan
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Originally posted by Jonathan View Post
Well FF, it was mostly because I thought I'd have a go at writing a book (ok, it turned into 2 with a third in progress) but it would have been nice to have made a reasonable amount of money from it! So far, I've spent more on the advertising than I've made in royalties. I gave up on the advertising in the summer as, despite 1600 page views / unique users, not one single copy was attributable to that.
My only (completed) novel was first sent to a professional reader who made suggestions which I rejected out of hand because it meant completely rethinking what I was trying to say (which obviously hadn't been made clear! ). Established publishers don't now accept unsolicited manuscripts, so I approached several agents, one of whom was complimentary but they currently 'didn't have a suitable gap in their list' (can't remember the exact phrase but it meant NO). But my view was that if it didn't reach the publishable standards set by professionals, I didn't want it published anyway. If it it didn't make it through the system it probably just wasn't good enough. (Also I didn't reveal my own name at any point in the process! )It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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For someone who simply wanted to have a go at writing a book I'd say you've done well to get two novels published!
It seems to me that novels that sell nowadays are the result of a lot of knowledge and research into the most saleable plots, character names and ages, and even paragraph and sentence length. I even think it likely that a lot of novels are 'written' by computers with all this data programmed in. I wouldn't be surprised if this applies to those novels 'ghost-written' by bright english-lit. graduates employed by publishers to produce the novels that appear under the names of celebrity TV chefs and gardeners .
To my mind, someoen who just wanted to write a book deserves far more praise than that. It would be nice to think this could still succeed. But I fear its about as likely as someone driving a hire-purchase Delahaye from London to Le Mans and taking patrt in the 24-hours, as Rob Walker did in 1939.
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... after Jocelyn Brooke, Aldous Huxley. After Crome Yellow (which was fun: a spoof on the Ottoline Morrell set at Garsington) almost at the end of Antic Hay. Very funny, desperately sad. A satire on the 'bright young things' of London in the 1920s, trying manically to 'have a good time' as a diversion from the awfulness of the Great War from which they have just escaped.
Influenced by the character of Pasteur Mercaptan in Antic Hay, I shall now have to read la Sopha of Crébillon fils...
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I thought that Claudia Pineiro's 'A crack in the wall ' was a clever bit of writing. On the face of it the book was about a murder but the plot was pretty smart in dealing with the consequences. It seemed compelling but a little predictable until two thirds through when it reveals that many of the principle characters are also carrying out their own crimes. No so much a twist but a slight of hand where your sympathies change once you realise what is happening. Beautifully written but all very smart. I really recommend this out of the ordinary writer .
Now reading the latest Rebus book by Ian Rankin. Not sure how people will receive this book with the main character locked up inside prison. The most interesting element of the story concerns Malcolm Fox who looks like getting his come uppance
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Just finished Sue Prideaux’s biography ‘Wild Thing: A Life of Paul Gauguin’, which reappraises his somewhat louche reputation (probably established, soon after his death, by Maugham’s fictionalised treatment of his life in The Moon and Sixpence). It’s a fascinating and illuminating read (I hadn’t realised he spent time as a labourer digging the Panama Canal), and reveals new evidence regarding the medical conditions he suffered from towards the end of his life. Prideaux states that Gauguin was a devotee of Wagner’s music, and was synaesthesic. But Prideaux also states that Wagner was synaesthesic, a claim which I have never before encountered. Have any of the learned folk here heard tell of this?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... after Jocelyn Brooke, Aldous Huxley. After Crome Yellow (which was fun: a spoof on the Ottoline Morrell set at Garsington) almost at the end of Antic Hay. Very funny, desperately sad. A satire on the 'bright young things' of London in the 1920s, trying manically to 'have a good time' as a diversion from the awfulness of the Great War from which they have just escaped.
Influenced by the character of Pasteur Mercaptan in Antic Hay, I shall now have to read la Sopha of Crébillon fils...
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Originally posted by smittims View PostRe-reading Wuthering Heights, I'm impressed by the symmetry and intricate structure of the novel . I didn't appreciate this last time.
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