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Author Craft / Re: despite the flack I'm going to get....
« on: August 02, 2010, 02:10:24 AM »Well, IMO it wasn't just "luck and marketing" that got Rowling and/or Meyers published.
They both had to at least conceive and then write a story that connected with their audience in the first place.
That's a matter of skill & perseverance.
Heavy on the perseverance.
Those things had to take place 100% prior to any 'luck' or 'marketing'.
Virtually every author professionally published will have some story variant of how much sheer perseverance it took to get noticed and published.
Luck plays into it here - Once they had something to sell, and that something was recognized by *someone* reading the slush pile (or however it happened for them) as "Hey! This has a market - I can make some cash with this stuff!"
THEN the marketing comes in.
And, generally speaking, the real big marketing isn't done by the author. It's done by the publisher.
And while I would not say that either authors works are the kind of thing where one starts reading and cannot put it down because of the gripping narrative, or deathless prose, (or whatever superlative works for you), it isn't exactly "bad". (I've browsed the slush pile before. The word is usually dreck. Or gawdawful. Or "Pleasemakeitstopnooo!")
Both authors works tap into a certain commonality of human experience, and despite the writers limitations, they manage to do it well enough to sell boatloads of books.
The Backstreet Boys aren't Bach. But they are exceptional for what they are.
Ditto Rowling & Meyer.
i agree that they had to conceive and write the books and that they had good ideas, but jk rowling herself admits it was luck as she gt publish the second time she sent it away, i could quote but i can't be bothered to did out my 2010 copy of the writers and artist yearbook