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Writing a novel
#26

Writing a novel

Surprised no one mentioned the book "Write to Market". It's a bestseller for a reason. The principles within apply to non-fiction as well as fiction. The main gist of the book is:

Write a good book people want to read... that fulfills people's expectations with regard to plot, character, and pace. You don't need a college degree to write the next bestseller either. Just READ READ READ, as much as you write.

Read at least three recent (10 years) bestselling novels in your genre. If sci-fi, go for total immersion. Watch Star Trek. Play Mass Effect. Watch Battlestar Galactica. Read the scripts. Outline the chapters in your favorite sci-fi book. What did fans like or not like?

Study the Bestseller Lists for your genre, the Top Books. Read five '5 star' reviews found most helpful. Now read five '1 star' reviews people found most helpful. Take notes. This helps in identifying bad tropes or overused cliches or plots and characters that 'wander around in a fog' but don't go anywhere. Usually for galactic empire sci-fi type novels, there is a rogue captain, a ragtag crew, a huge ship with a cool name (Galactica), some unstoppable alien menace (Borg, Species 8472), a love interest, a rebel.

Authors who do not read in their respective genres do not succeed. Period. Full stop. They sort of bounce around for a few years and then give up. Read at least 1 hour a day.

In 2013-2015 I wrote seven bad novels in several genres but failed spectacularly because I forgot to account for reader expectations. And I did not read enough of my own genre to know what those expectations were. Movies alone will not do it. TV won't do it.

Try to avoid 'strong, independent' female captains. They do not exist.

Profit.
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#27

Writing a novel

Finished my first novel around 6 months ago, and working on a second. I view it purely as a hobby and way to have some sort of legacy after i'm gone. Both are historical fiction set in the early medieval age. First one was in first person, which in hindsight was somewhat challenging, as his character was a simple rural peasant, called up to fight. So I had to keep his 'voice' and vocabulary quite narrow. The second is in third person, and has given me a lot more freedom with the prose.

Fact is that you really can't make much money in fiction these days. Who buys it, lets face it? Aside from blockbusters, which is something my work would never be, even were i good enough, it's too much of a niche. But i draw comfort from how bloody awful a lot of historical fiction is, and the fact that mine is not in the least bit 'pozzed' like it seems all other kowtowing authors are doing (creating sassy female medieval characters, shoe-horned in 'divirsity', gay lovers etc etc etc). I try to sow in a few red pills very subtly into it, although really, that's probably not accurate, i just try and write how that time likely was, which was a time when everyone pretty much was red pilled. On matters like race, gender and religion anyway.
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#28

Writing a novel

I wrote a book (not a novel) and whoever said that the work doesn't start until you're finished is right on.

The writing part is fun. Once you hit a rhythm you can crank out words on command.

I will be checking my PMs weekly, so you can catch me there. I will not be posting.
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#29

Writing a novel

Most of my income is from fiction writing. Once again, it's the main reason I return to this forum. Beyond Boarders convinced me it could be done. Don't get too excited; I could make more money at a hamburger joint. If there's a magic formula for fame and fortune by writing novels, I've yet to find it. You can do alright if you find the right combination of readers and niches. However, I'm not there yet. My one observation is that anyone who fancies himself a novelist better learn to hustle. You'll need marketing, sales, and editing skills. Most of us will never be "discovered" by some famous agent. You have to hit the circuit and not be afraid to put yourself in front of a camera. Besides, most of the buyers and agents for the trad publishers are infested with the blue pill disease.
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#30

Writing a novel

Quote: (07-26-2014 12:29 PM)Cr33pin Wrote:  




I saw the title of this thread and went to post this video..... then saw the same thought crossed my mind 5 years ago...... some things never change

Bruising cervix since 96
#TeamBeard
"I just want to live out my days drinking virgin margaritas and banging virgin señoritas" - Uncle Cr33pin
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#31

Writing a novel

The old dream of writing the "great American novel" is long gone now. Fiction reading is such a niche hobby and has faded in relevance to movies, Netflix, social media, video games, and a number of other modern pleasures. Within that small niche, the majority of the interest and activity is in genre fiction. No one cares about literary fiction and no one really makes money from it anymore. Hell, even literary fiction has been its own genre in contemporary times, where every "serious" author was writing some magical realism style coming-of-age/multi-generational family story the last couple decades.

Of course, modern publishing/literature also might be the most SJW infested cultural institution in the West. Now I know that they've infected all cultural institutions in today's age, but I really don't know how an unknown white male can break through in the industry. Go look at any literary award, competition, fellowship, or site seeking new submissions and you will see an overwhelming number of women/PoC represented. Back in college I submitted some short fiction around and even at that time some sites were mentioning without a hint of irony that they weren't interested in submissions from white males in an effort to be more diverse. Basically, if you aren't already long established, you're probably better off self-publishing and trying to build your own audience, especially if you're writing about objective reality and more red pill themes. But who has got the time and financial stability for that?

Just for laughs here's the first site I found after looking up major book awards. Look at who is mostly winning nowadays. Plot twist: the first white male you see is gay and won the Pulitzer Prize for writing about a gay author about to turn fifty who is totally not based on the nearly fifty year old author himself. How creative.

https://www.bookbrowse.com/awards/
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#32

Writing a novel

I am sure the hardest part isn't writing a novel but getting it published.

Don't debate me.
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#33

Writing a novel

It's easy to do that with all the Internet forms you can use. I can have ten copies or more generated for any of my books. No longer do you have to worry about dumping $$$ on a local printer and pray you won't go broke. In the old days, vanity presses thrived on this sort of thing. Many wannbe novelists lived in houses full of their unsold books. I still see private edition and vanity press books from the 80's floating around at used bookstores.
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