Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

Yes. And no. Are you? I can be. Sometimes.

 

A few years back I stopped reading an author whose novels no longer appealed to me. What happened? It wasn’t the writing per se; it was the “process”. By that I mean this particular author began a new series by making the first book a total set-up for the second one. After reading the second one which should’ve been combined with the first, I said enough. When I feel manipulated as a reader, I’m done.

 

Also several years ago I picked up a novel to read the back cover copy because the book was large—and you know how I love long contemporary stories. I read the entire back cover copy with this one which I don’t always do and decided to fork out the bucks for the hard cover newer release. Well . . . the story started out interesting, but soon zoomed into pure “speculative”. The writing was decent, but the plot was nothing like I expected. Apparently I had completely misunderstood the copy, and I trudged through this novel also not knowing it was the first in a trilogy. When this novel ended in a cliff-hanger, it totally dropped off that cliff with an unexpected plot additive on the very last page. Knowing I wouldn’t be reading the following books, I was not only disappointed, I was irked. I’d spent my money on a book I wouldn’t have read if I’d known what to expect. Somehow I missed its purpose in the copy. This author finished the trilogy and I believe has one more book either coming soon or just released. Needless to say, I doubt I’ll take a chance on him again in spite of the better than average writing.

 

I consider the two previous examples to be reasonable explanations for stopping on an author. And I don’t consider them to be examples of a fickle reader.

 

When we’re attracted to an author or his/her book for whatever reason and we read said book and enjoy it, we do one of two things. We look for others by the same author or we settle for the experience and keep reading any number of books that interest us without specifically seeking out that author. I’ve read and been entertained and/or emotionally invested in novels by authors but when their next book released, I didn’t run to acquire it. Not because I didn’t appreciate and even admire a previous book but because the new one didn’t catch that indefinable “something” that compels me to pay the price for a new book. I think that might qualify as somewhat fickle. The reason being at this point in my reading life there are certain authors who I’m guaranteed to read whether I receive their novels free for review, win them from a contest, or purchase them for myself: I’m committed to those authors.

 

There are other authors I watch for, but it definitely depends on the book itself whether or not I will buy it. If I’m indifferent and the particular novel is offered for review, if I’m not overbooked, I’ll read it. If I’m up to my burning eyeballs in stories waiting for reviews, I’ll pass.

 

Many readers set their sights upon favorite authors and never quit on them. Other readers couldn’t tell you the names of the authors of their favorite books. And I’ve said before some readers have no clue how valuable they are in the process of promotion and marketing. They’re an unaware bunch who simply read to enjoy stories and might or might not share the titles or what they think of them with friends and relatives. Literally an untapped resource.

 

I’ve also been where my friend Dayle is with an author he used to really enjoy, and that’s giving the author one last chance to “redeem” himself. When the new novels stray too far from what we’ve come to expect and appreciate from authors, we bid them farewell after giving them several opportunities to re-prove themselves to us. Other readers don’t offer those chances. One disappointment and they’re gone. “Too many books, too little time.”

 

So. Are you a “fickle” reader?

 

Father, let those of us who write be true to you before and above all others. In the Name of Jesus, Amen.

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2 responses to “Are readers fickle?”

  1. Kristen Torres-Toro Avatar

    Hey, N–your words were read, even without comments. I know because even with my messed up computer, I was able to come on and read at least one post. 🙂
    Hmm… I’ve become more choosy in the past year or two. I think it’s because my time is so limited I don’t have the time or the shelf space to waste it reading a book I hate. A few years ago I always finished every book I started (novels for my English classes were an exception) and just collected voraciously. I didn’t care what the book was or about–it went on my shelves.
    But now I’m more choosy. I will walk away if I don’t care about the story or the characters. I’m more choosy in the bookstore when picking. Most of it has to do with my limited resources (time, money, and shelf space) and my desire to find that treasure of a story for the little free time I have.
    Usually, if I read and author and didn’t like him/her, I walk away. But I will make an exception for a different genre or a storyline that really appeals to me by the same author. If it’s an author I loved and just didn’t like one book, I’ll definitely come back. Even my favorite musical artists have songs on their cds (or entire albums) I just don’t like. Art is subjective, even from the same artist.
    As a prepublished author, I think about this a lot. I need a lot of people willing to take a chance on me, a lot of readers willing to pay and spend their time on my stories. So while I will walk away, I try to be patient. And sometimes I give multiple chances because I’m “rooting” for them.

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  2. Nicole Avatar

    So far I haven’t quit on a book, but I think I’m getting closer. I mean what’s the point if I don’t like it? In fact, I guess I hope to get there one day, but not if I’ve signed up to review it: then I’m stuck.
    It’s easy to not read a second book if I really didn’t like my first sample. I’ve gotten that far, although not sure if that’s good or bad. 😉

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