A copy of "Success with Style" research Photo credit | Elizabeth K Humphrey |
I’m embarking on a new novel and my writer’s antenna is now up to any mention of a best-selling novel.
I want one of those.
Before I get there, I know I need quite a few things:
- Conflict…and lots of it!
- A realistic protagonist who also provides an element of escapism
- An antagonist who gives my protagonist reasons to fret
- A fabulous setting and, of course,
- The language of a best seller
I can hear you asking: What is best-selling language? A Grammar
Girl post last week mentioned a published study that
used an algorithm to study styles used to produce commercial success. The
results produced suggestions of words that might produce more success than
others. Researchers culled the books…and words…from the Project Gutenberg to study the style of
these publishing winners.
The study, in itself, is a fascinating bit of research. For
example, within adventure books, books using the word recognized apparently fared better
than those works using words with a more emotional tone. But this also got
me thinking--and considering--how a writer might implement such a list. And I decided to return to the list of what my novel needs and add one more item. In order for my book to move into the
stratosphere of a best seller:
- It needs to find its readers
The report suggests words or parts of speech from successful
works, but it doesn’t tell me how to put them together to reach my audience.
That’s up to me. That's for me to figure out and put word after word after word to convey something to my readers that connects with them.
So, if the next time you sit at your desk ready to write,
are you looking for an external list of words to plug in? Or are you choosing
the words that come from within you? Are you selecting words that resonate from
your own years of experience? Or even from your character taking over the plot
and fighting with her nemesis?
Sure, writers study books on craft and workshop their
writing. But using an algorithm to determine a best seller seems far removed from my heart
that I pour out on the page, day after day.
The study is interesting, but I’m going to let my characters
tell their own story in their own words. best seller or not.
Elizabeth King
Humphrey is a writer and editor living in North Carolina. Her writing credits
include the Idiot’s Guide:
Gluten-Free Eating (Alpha, 2014).
Elizabeth--I think if the characters ring true, if we can connect with them and mourn with them and cheer them on and if it's a story that keeps up turning the page--if all that happens, we can forgive the absence of small things that people claim are necessary for a book to become a best-selling novel.
ReplyDeleteGood luck.
I think if you channel too much effort into trying to make your book fit some algorithm for success, you're going to sacrifice whatever charms it would have had if you had let it develop on its own. We're people, not machines; we simply don't work that way. And since they have yet to develop a machine that can write a best-selling novel, there must be something to this humanity thing after all.
ReplyDeleteThis is NOT like the chicken and the egg. I think in this case the bestselling novels came first and then someone created this algorithm afterwards. I think that if you tried to write to this algorithm, you might go mad!
ReplyDelete