TASTYLEADPAINT
Resident Tech priest
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2020
- Messages
- 602
- Points
- 133
This really.I'll go first: 80% of 'plot twists/foreshadowing' is just authors reusing fan theories.
This really.I'll go first: 80% of 'plot twists/foreshadowing' is just authors reusing fan theories.
Hmm... I've got this idea, but that theory sounds much better. Lemme grab that.This really.
True. And less than 20% of published authors (who have a book selling in bookstores, not the online ones) earn enough to make a living. The others have a second job (source)Successful authors usually have a team of people to help produce and publish the book with enough money and market backing to sell well.
That's how I think about James Patterson.team of people
James Patterson does absolutely none of his own writing. At best, he might come up with the initial idea for a book before passing it along to one of his "co-authors." That's why each book in his longer series feels so vastly different and disconnected from each other. They were all written by a different "co-author" with their own style and ideas for where the series should go.That's how I think about James Patterson.
Or they want to do it for the money. Like, they haven't finished 3 chapters yet, and they ask how to set up a Patreon. Buddy, even people who've writing for years have a hard time earning enough to make a livingThe majority of people who "write" and want to "be writers", especially within online writing spaces, don't treat it seriously enough, and that's why they fail. Whenever I see someone ask a question that has been asked and answered a dozen times, I think to myself, "This person will probably never make it because they aren't willing to put in the effort."
There are about five or six "big name" authors like this - had one book that was moderately successful after a publishing house passed it over to a co-author to finish, and used that to build a "stable" of authors to write "his" books, morphing into a powerhouse. Tom Clancy was this way, IIRC. Supposedly they come up with a core idea, either alone, with a "celebrity co-writer" or with a group of writers around them, send the idea out to their "farm" of up-and-comers to write, edit a few chapters, make sure the final project is readable, and send it off to the publisher.James Patterson does absolutely none of his own writing. At best, he might come up with the initial idea for a book before passing it along to one of his "co-authors." That's why each book in his longer series feels so vastly different and disconnected from each other. They were all written by a different "co-author" with their own style and ideas for where the series should go.
I liked the first one, despite a few hiccups. The second was better written but just not as fun. Then it morphed into a "save the world from corporate raiders forcing climate change" manifesto instead of a fun coming-of-age-with-superpowers-in-a-world-of-mostly-hostile-normals series and just killed my interest. Each book did feel written by a different person but edited by someone to try and make them a little consistent.It also didn't hurt that I tried to go back and read Maximum Ride ten years or so later, and found out it was one of the most badly written books I've ever touched. I've seen fanfics written by middle schoolers with more skill than these hacks.
Even as a fifteen year old, that threw me for a loop. They spent the whole series talking about how Max was created to save the world, and the end result of that is that she's...supposed to hold a bunch of anti-global warming rallies? And they needed a bunch of human/bird mutants to do that for clearly self-evident reasons, of course. I also vaguely remember Max raising an army of civilian kids and telling them to storm a highly militarized government facility full of people who have made it abundantly clear they have no qualms about killing innocent people if they're so much as a minor inconvenience.save the world from corporate raiders forcing climate change
You made it one book farther than I did, then. Or that was in one of the two spin-off novels featuring the other bird-mutants (which I also ignored)Even as a fifteen year old, that threw me for a loop. They spent the whole series talking about how Max was created to save the world, and the end result of that is that she's...supposed to hold a bunch of anti-global warming rallies? And they needed a bunch of human/bird mutants to do that for clearly self-evident reasons, of course. I also vaguely remember Max raising an army of civilian kids and telling them to storm a highly militarized government facility full of people who have made it abundantly clear they have no qualms about killing innocent people if they're so much as a minor inconvenience.
There is also a fight club, and when he is bored he hunts them for sport.That's how I think about James Patterson.
He has a farm somewhere, and everyones is called James Patterson with a number and there are 50 or 80 of them.
Every now and then a JP will go present their book to James Patterson #1. If he likes it, it gets published. If not, they get rejected and their James Patterson rank drops, if it too low they are fired from the James Patterson ranch, and they don't get to be James Patterson anymore.
I admit to this! Well, to a certain degree anyway. Fan theories about a few things in one of my fanfictions inspired chapters from other character's PoVs and had me swapping out characters for plot points instead of using the ones I was going to. Kind of like a "huh... that makes more sense" after it gets pointed out.I'll go first: 80% of 'plot twists/foreshadowing' is just authors reusing fan theories.
What do you mean "delete"? Not that... I've done that...Write spicy chapters between two of the characters you secretly ship, and then delete them before your readers can see it and you bring dishonor on yourself, your family, and your cow. What is wrong with you? Your parents are right to be ashamed.
Notice: I am just a victim-nya.I have reincarnated countless times and being a duck is just kind mid,however, that doesn't mean I'm not absolute-nya.
nya? A cat will awalys be a cat. You think you can become a duck, just because you jumped into the river of reincarnation?
And don't forget other craft nonsense, like "Writing is rewriting." Nonsense.I watched a writing advice video talking about how you should tackle themes by thinking of them as one single question instead of a more broad idea, which pissed me the hell off. A lot of the stories I love don't fit into that.