Stewart
Active Member
Just a quickie, see if it whips up any thoughts. Excuse while I flit between realism and complete fantasy without warning.
We've been reading for weeks now about mainstream, about literature, about the different levels of readers, and also learning who isn't intelligent.
This one is for the board's authors: published, self-published, and aspiring.
If your influences are Dan Brown, Stephen King, Anne Rice, Clive Cussler, James Patterson, Jeffrey Archer, Dean Koontz, or some other mainstream author, and you buy their books, do you not feel that you are then holding yourself back - with respect to publication - as, by supporting mainstream authors, the commercial aspect kicks into play and the shelves fill with more and more Brown, King, Cussler et all
I was in Borders yesterday, nipped along to the horror section, and one whole bookshelf was King, one was Rice, one was Laymon and Koontz, one was Barker, Hamilton, Hutson, and Fowler. There was, perhaps, half a shelf of lesser known authors - from big and small presses - making up the rest.
By buying more King he'll eventually swallow up that half shelf with his books. But, by buying the other books, you show the moneymen that there is a demand for new fiction and, in the long term, this could lead to more of a chance for yourself.
We've been reading for weeks now about mainstream, about literature, about the different levels of readers, and also learning who isn't intelligent.
This one is for the board's authors: published, self-published, and aspiring.
If your influences are Dan Brown, Stephen King, Anne Rice, Clive Cussler, James Patterson, Jeffrey Archer, Dean Koontz, or some other mainstream author, and you buy their books, do you not feel that you are then holding yourself back - with respect to publication - as, by supporting mainstream authors, the commercial aspect kicks into play and the shelves fill with more and more Brown, King, Cussler et all
I was in Borders yesterday, nipped along to the horror section, and one whole bookshelf was King, one was Rice, one was Laymon and Koontz, one was Barker, Hamilton, Hutson, and Fowler. There was, perhaps, half a shelf of lesser known authors - from big and small presses - making up the rest.
By buying more King he'll eventually swallow up that half shelf with his books. But, by buying the other books, you show the moneymen that there is a demand for new fiction and, in the long term, this could lead to more of a chance for yourself.