Aspiring writer friends, I know we want people
to love our writing, and subsequently buy our books—hopefully more than a few
people—but what about those who don’t? How much does that matter to you?
If you’re writing a psychological thriller,
and a friend only reads western romance novels with hunky cowboys, chances are,
she won’t like your book. Understandable, right? I won’t bother purchasing your cowboy romance,
nor will I buy your newly published book about aliens invading San Francisco.
Okay, if we know each other well, I will buy them. I’ve read many books out of
my normal interests because I know the author, but I will never buy a book like
“Fifty Shades of Grey”—even if my daughter writes it! I will wish you the best of luck, but don’t
expect me to read it. And that should be okay. It doesn’t reflect on your
ability to write a good book. It only says my interests are different.
I recently pinned some photos of plants that
I hope to add to the landscape of our soon-to-be home. A friend commented that
a couple of the plants I liked would "grow ugly". I knew what she
meant, but that feature was one of the things that I liked about the plant. She
conceded that people have different tastes with a comment something like,
"That's why we have brown shoes and black shoes."
No matter where your talent lies, there will
be someone who doesn’t appreciate it. I don’t think many would say Barbra
Streisand can’t sing, but there are many who would not pay to own her albums.
I say all this to encourage you. And as
writers, we all need encouragement. There are enough stumbling blocks in this
process without raising our expectations beyond realistic heights—that everyone
in the world would fall in love with our book and give it raving five-star reviews.
Not. Gonna. Happen.
This afternoon, I finished reading TheNight Bird by Brian Freeman.I LOVED this book! Psychological thriller is
one of my favorite genres. However, I find many authors can’t tell a tale
without excessive foul language and sex. I’d rather not read it. This author
had enough talent that he could fill a book without the need for graphic sex
and bad talk. I thoroughly enjoyed it from beginning to end.
I went on Amazon to post a review, and as always, there were numerous
one-star reviews. I read through them to see what it was that people disliked
about this book. One reviewer wrote that it would desensitize people to
violence. Well, that is debatable for sure. But wouldn’t that hold true for all
psychological thrillers? Is it fair to rate a book so low because you don’t
like the genre? More than one said the plot wasn’t believable. I often
read reviews criticizing an author for writing exactly the way the genre should
be written!
Okay, it wasn’t the best book I’ve ever read. The author had a
habit of using the “grocery list” method of describing characters. In a couple
of places, it harshly interrupted the flow of the story. (If I were his editor,
this is an area I would have asked him to chop.) And although the storyline was
crazy, it’s supposed to be! It’s a psychological thriller. That means it’s also
fiction. I don’t think the events in this book could really happen. I don’t
care. It was entertaining and had me turning pages on the edge of my seat!
I’m glad Mr. Freeman isn’t going to
stop writing because a few people don’t like his books. I plan on reading many
more from this author. I’m sure that the bestselling authors have had more than
their share of bad reviews. So when you finish that manuscript and throw it out
there to the world, don’t dwell on that reader who says your book bored him, or
she didn’t care for your style, or your story isn’t feasible. Dwell on the fact
that you did it! Dwell on all the times people told you it was good. Dwell on
the enjoyment you got when you typed The End. Dwell on being called a published
author.
By the way, I prefer brown shoes...but I often wear black.