lovecraft68
Bad Doggie
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2009
- Posts
- 46,700
The market today is for big, ponderous trilogies with each book running to five hundred pages or more! Publishers call it "world-building" I call it tree desecration! The point is to "hook" readers with the first book and have a built-in audience for the sequels. To my mind, world-building can be accomplished with a minimum of words. "The clocks were striking thirteen" 1984. "The last man in the world sat alone in his room, there was a knock at the door" Frederic Brown's "Knock" and of course the entire story in six words by Hemingway, "For sale, baby shoes, never worn." I've been praised by lit readers and Amazon reviewers (for my non-literotica.com works) for my world-building. Why write five hundred words when fifty will suffice? My fiancee just landed a three-book deal. Her world-building is brief but wonderful.
It really seems to be a generational thing. Yes TLOR is huge and Asimov's "Foundation" trilogy rivals the Manhattan phone book in length, but those were exceptions. None of Lewis's Narnia books are over 250 pages or so, yet it is every bit as developed as Tolkein's. In one story, I crammed the entire history "House elves" (my invention) in less than five thousand words. I could probably spin an entire novel out of these creatures, but why bother? I said pretty much everything I wanted to say. Sometimes length really helps. "Moby Dick" was originally a MUCH shorter novel. Melville's Beta-reader, Samuel Hawthorn suggested the Herman "put some religion" into his novel. One really can't argue with the results.
Today's "hip" young authors all seem to go for words, words, and more words, with plots that are paper-thin at best. The Nineteenth Century was the era of the long novel, but aside from Hugo and Dickens how many of them are read today? I suspect that this will be very much the case with these twenty-first-century word smiths.
Its the same in mainstream as it is here in the sense the readers want more. Readers enjoy reading, they are not as picky and snarky about the same things authors who think they know how everything should be(in their opinion) are.
There are stories here with over 50-and some 100-chapters, and the readers keep wanting more. They fall in love with the characters, the settings etc...a new book becomes a new visit with an old friend.
Sci-fi fantasy readers will read anything their favorite authors keep piling on. Want to talk excessive and wordy? Look no further than Game of Thrones that takes hundreds of pages to describe a boat trip done in a few minutes in the show.
But the readers of that series-which will never finish so I don't know why they're that vested in that sense-can't get enough.
If it sells, people will keep doing it. Same as Hollywood, people complain everything is a remake, reboot, sequel....little is new....but as long as people keep going to the movies(when we could and when we can again) or watching on streaming services, they won't change.
The fan base drives the market, not the creator. Whether that's fair or not, that's the way it is.