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A J Irving wrote:I don't think it's all subjective. Could you find anyone who could come up with a really good argument as to why Katie Price's 'Angel' is a superior work of fiction to Orwell's 'Nineteen Eighty-Four'? I don't mean to sound snobby but there's trash fiction, and then there is Jordan. I would post quotes from it, but all the best lines would be taken out by the websites censor!
Replicant wrote:There is no right or wrong here. Of course, there is no doubt that there is a wide spectrum of literature out there; some of it is widely considered to be classic, well-written stuff. And some it, not to put too fine a point on it, is most definitely not. I'm not disputing that, but it's not the point here. I was just stating that it can only be a good thing that kids (and indeed, adults) are reading more. That's all. Hope that's cleared things up.
A_n_t wrote:As I said though most people "like" Jordan do not write the books, they give a rough synopsis (apparently) of what the story is about and someone else writes it (ghost writers). These are probably the poor unpublished authors that resort to this because they cannot get their own works published.
Wishmaster wrote:A_n_t wrote:As I said though most people "like" Jordan do not write the books, they give a rough synopsis (apparently) of what the story is about and someone else writes it (ghost writers). These are probably the poor unpublished authors that resort to this because they cannot get their own works published.
Is it really so widespread? It's ironic to think someone who can't get their own work published goes a long way toward making the fortune of someone else. I guess this is literally a case of "you pay for the name".
Wishmaster wrote:Is it really so widespread? It's ironic to think someone who can't get their own work published goes a long way toward making the fortune of someone else. I guess this is literally a case of "you pay for the name".
Gary Dickson wrote:So, nobody is denying that some books are objectively better than others?
Wishmaster wrote:Is it me or does at least some of the blame for subjectively poor quality writing land on the doorstep of the publishers? I often wonder how many authors had one or maybe even two wonderful books worth of tales to tell and were lured or pressured by the publisher to write more. Did JK Rowling set out to write so many books about Harry Potter or was she made an offer she couldn't refuse? Judging by her vast income, I'd bet on the latter.
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