date
newest »
newest »
Randy wrote: "Everything depends on the writer I would think. Some can do it, some can't. For example, I know you like James Reasoner. He write a million plus words a year and while I haven't read anywhere close..."Thanks for the insightful comments, Randy. Yes sir, for me likewise James Reasoner is always dependable to deliver a satisfying read. If I see his books, I grab them with no second thoughts. I like his Westerns, old and new, quite a bit. They just feel authentic. The bestselling author you discuss brings up a topic I fear doing: writing the same book over and over. Bad news there. Anyway, thanks again for picking up Blood Diamonds. I hope you enjoy it.
there are many prolific authors who later reduce their output. I have many favorite authors whose earlier works (4 books/yr) were better than the one book/yr they put out now. Maybe the reduced output is due to lack of new ideas or plots?
Michele wrote: "there are many prolific authors who later reduce their output. I have many favorite authors whose earlier works (4 books/yr) were better than the one book/yr they put out now. Maybe the reduced out..."I don't know why the fall off in production. Maybe burn out. Maybe fatigue is a factor. Running out of ideas for plots seems a good reason to me, too.



On the other hand, there's one best selling writer, I won't mention names here, who's written five novels in his career. I haven't read that fifth and never will. In reading those first four in short order, I came to realize he was writing the same novel over and over. Sort of like movie sequels, it was all paint by numbers: hero here, female picked up along the way, a scarred killer chasing them, a friend helping who inevitably ends up as the major villain who sent the killer after his friend.
I have no reason to think the fifth would be any different. Why read a book when you've read it four times already.