Who wants to write a bestseller? - Karen Bush
The problem with writing a
best seller is that then the pressure really is on to follow it up. Some
authors do succeed: the seventh Harry Potter book reportedly had sales of 11
million during the first 24 hours, beating book six by 2 million sales. The
series has come to an end, but eyes are once again on J K Rowling this month,
with her first adult book due out on the 27th. Can’t say I’d like to be in her shoes
as there are doubtless going to be a lot of people out there hoping to see her
fail, and I suspect there will be a lot who run
it down, regardless of its quality.
Then of course there are those who tried but failed: Bram Stoker will forever be associated with Dracula and Mary Shelley with Frankenstein. Kenneth Grahame and Richard Adams also wrote other books, but it will always be the best selling and much loved Wind in the Willows and Watership Down for which they are best remembered, and which, like Frankenstein and Dracula, continue to sell. And then there’s Three Men in a Boat, an instant runaway hit, of which J K Jerome’s publisher declared “I pay Jerome so much in royalties, I cannot imagine what becomes of all the copies of that book I issue. I often think the public must eat them.” Jerome himself remained puzzled as to its success, averring that he had written much better and more humorous books. Yet he never succeeded in recapturing the popularity of Three Men, which has never been out of print since it first appeared in 1889.
Perhaps success isn't always everything you'd hoped for.
Yes indeed, who wants to write a best seller?
Yes, trying to follow up a
best seller must be a tough task. While Rowling has kept on writing and each of her books so far has
outsold the previous one, some authors become literary one hit wonders - Wuthering
Heights and Black Beauty spring to mind, although to be fair their authors had
little chance for a second crack of the whip: Anna Sewell died five months after publication
of her masterpiece, and Bronte a year after hers. There is of course, the
possibility that having achieved her purpose - of highlighting the inhumane
treatment of horses which was current at the time – Anna Sewell might not have written
anything else.
We’ll never know, but in my opinion, it
would have been difficult to cap Black Beauty.
Some writers deliberately
toss the towel in: think of To Kill a Mockingbird, Catcher in the Rye and Gone
With The Wind – Margaret Mitchell hated fame and declared she would never write
another word, while Lee and Salinger both became virtual recluses.
Then of course there are those who tried but failed: Bram Stoker will forever be associated with Dracula and Mary Shelley with Frankenstein. Kenneth Grahame and Richard Adams also wrote other books, but it will always be the best selling and much loved Wind in the Willows and Watership Down for which they are best remembered, and which, like Frankenstein and Dracula, continue to sell. And then there’s Three Men in a Boat, an instant runaway hit, of which J K Jerome’s publisher declared “I pay Jerome so much in royalties, I cannot imagine what becomes of all the copies of that book I issue. I often think the public must eat them.” Jerome himself remained puzzled as to its success, averring that he had written much better and more humorous books. Yet he never succeeded in recapturing the popularity of Three Men, which has never been out of print since it first appeared in 1889.
Perhaps success isn't always everything you'd hoped for.
Yes indeed, who wants to write a best seller?
Buy your copy here
and help to make it a bestseller!
Comments
Not totally sure what I'll do if I have a big hit one day, but if I ever do I'd like it to happen a few months - certainly no longer than a year or two - before I die. It would be just too depressing to live on, never being able to repeat it, and having everyone say that once you were famous...