If I read the first page of a 500+ page novel and love it, I'm immensely pleased with the size of the book. Seems I'm not the only one who loves a good, long read. Interesting musings on the state of reading today.
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I disagree with him, and he did, in fact, contradict himself. The size of a Joyce or Proust book might well reduce the readership because they are not easy reads. But books that immerse the reader easily, that strike the entertainment chords that a reader is seeking - they sell well whatever the thickness: the later Harry Potters; the Wolk Hall trilogy; A Song of Ice and Fire etc.If I read the first page of a 500+ page novel and love it, I'm immensely pleased with the size of the book. Seems I'm not the only one who loves a good, long read. Interesting musings on the state of reading today.
I disagree with him, and he did, in fact, contradict himself. The size of a Joyce or Proust book might well reduce the readership because they are not easy reads. But books that immerse the reader easily, that strike the entertainment chords that a reader is seeking - they sell well whatever the thickness: the later Harry Potters; the Wolk Hall trilogy; A Song of Ice and Fire etc.
It is worth noting that Rowling, as an unknown. didn't start her series with a thick book. But once anything she wrote Potter-wise was a sure thing, she went bigger and could have gone bigger still (just so long as it fit into a school satchel).
One also has to ask, what if Joyce or Proust had left out the "boring" bits most people skim? Would they have sold more books?
It's not quantity that matters, it's quality.
Debut authors would be wise (aka Rowling) to err on the shorter side of their accepted genre wordcount because the quality of their work is as yet unknown.
Exactly! I mean, what is the point of that?Ha @Vagabond Heart I have never skimmed. I also NEVER peek at the ending, something my sisters have told me they do with every book. Sounds awful to me. Why would I do that to myself?
Oh definitely. I think the article is less about first time writers, or writers in general, and more about readers.For unknowns or first timers such as many of us, agents and publishers cringe (in most cases outright reject) when we note our manuscript is 100k words. It's normally a deathknell.
100% agree with this. If I had picked up anything larger than Absalom, Absalom! as my first Faulkner, I doubt I would have spent much time laboring though any of his other novels. Had to trust he was going to deliver in the end to wage war against grammar and exhausting sentences like his.It's not quantity that matters, it's quality.
One also has to ask, what if Joyce or Proust had left out the "boring" bits most people skim? Would they have sold more books?
Ha @Vagabond Heart I have never skimmed. I also NEVER peek at the ending, something my sisters have told me they do with every book. Sounds awful to me. Why would I do that to myself?
The writer is very close to entering the territory of reading superiority
I shudder at the thought. How do you know if you've skimmed past the point? Do people do this with life too? Hmmm...Am I the only one who never knew, until quite late in life, that people skimmed bits? It genuinely never occurred to me to do that. Still can't.
I'd never skip to the end. I rarely skim. I'll plough through even if it's boring just in case I miss something. My only exception is gore, e.g. in battles. I'll skim very quickly until the story moves on. (I skimmed a huge amount of the G.O.T. Dothraki chapters - just couldn't stomach them.)I shudder at the thought. How do you know if you've skimmed past the point? Do people do this with life too? Hmmm...
As a rule of thumb, if I can't be bothered to read what the author wrote, well then I'll just go read something else. Not much is more off-putting than pretending to have read something, much like switching off when a friend speaks, smiling and nodding like we heard them.
Oh but the dragons!I'd never skip to the end. I rarely skim. I'll plough through even if it's boring just in case I miss something. My only exception is gore, e.g. in battles. I'll skim very quickly until the story moves on. (I skimmed a huge amount of the G.O.T. Dothraki chapters - just couldn't stomach them.)
To be fair, yes. Because how else do you get through a three-hour car journey with a five yr-old who wants to relate, in detail, every episode of The Simpsons they have ever seen?Do people do this with life too? Hmmm...