Day 157
Populism or dedication?
…
So, who wants to be a New York Times No. 1 best-selling author?
Me!
Who wants to be compared to the likes of Dickens, Hemingway, Tolstoy, or any of the classic authors and write a story that is a literary treasure?
Me, too!
Shall the twain ever meet?
Here’s the rub. If you want to make a living out of writing, you need to write at least one or two books a year, have them become ‘must reads’ like those of James Patterson or Clive Cussler.
That’s writing to a formula and taking the populist path. It is much easier, to a certain degree, to write a novel like a romance, a war story, a spy story, or a period piece like the Regency romances.
It is a lot more difficult to write a definitive literary novel. I keep thinking that one day I will, and I even started one about forty years ago.
I happened to read several novels by the author R.F. Delderfield, and one in particular, A Horseman Riding By. To me, at the time, it was the modern era equivalent of those classics by Dickens or Eliot.
It was a three-volume life history, and it captivated my imagination. At the time, I was working for a company whose history went back to the late 1800s and had a great many old records of how things were done, particularly mining on a remote island in the Pacific and a shipping line that carried the ore and passengers and stores and supplies.
That first volume ran from the 1930s to the start of the Second World War, and I spent a lot of time studying the people and processes of the time itself. It was as far as I got, but I still harbour the notion I will get it written.
One day.
Until then, populism rules!