Stella_Omega
No Gentleman
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2005
- Posts
- 39,700
So, a lot of the books that I buy now, are published only via kindle or moby or epub etc. It make it harder to peruse a book, because I used to go to a book shop, read a few pages at the beginning, a few pages in the middle, a few maybe towards the end (cause I don't care about spoilers) and online, the browsing is dictated by the site. Amazon gives you the first 2%, (ETA-- people are telling me 10%) for instance.
In many nonfiction books, this consists of the copyright notice, the forward, the TOS and two pages of text telling me how useful this book is going to be. If I can't take a look at a sample, I have no idea if in fact it will work for me at all. Self help books are notorious for this.
We find samples of world building, atmospheric setup and character introduction with no clue at all what the meat will be. (I.E. Perdido Street Station)
We see samples which present the main characters to be unlikeable in one way or another, and no sign that they will become less so over the course of the novel. That's going to be a problem for Romance writers.
You know all of those arcs and quandaries that are the reason for writing a novel... All we can see is the barest of beginnings. It really sucks.
I'm wondering what to do about this problem, as a writer. We want to sell, after all!
Brainstorming?
In many nonfiction books, this consists of the copyright notice, the forward, the TOS and two pages of text telling me how useful this book is going to be. If I can't take a look at a sample, I have no idea if in fact it will work for me at all. Self help books are notorious for this.
We find samples of world building, atmospheric setup and character introduction with no clue at all what the meat will be. (I.E. Perdido Street Station)
We see samples which present the main characters to be unlikeable in one way or another, and no sign that they will become less so over the course of the novel. That's going to be a problem for Romance writers.
You know all of those arcs and quandaries that are the reason for writing a novel... All we can see is the barest of beginnings. It really sucks.
I'm wondering what to do about this problem, as a writer. We want to sell, after all!
Brainstorming?
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