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JK Rowling should just stop writing, apparently.

Better go away and work a bit harder, eh?

In my life as a novelist, I've come to believe we are only in competition with ourselves when we strive to do our best; there is plenty of room for a multitude of successful endeavors in the ever changing world of books and readers, and there always will be.



There is a problem in publishing of well known people writing 'anything' and getting it published. But readers buy them so I blame readers *g*


We had someone in the group who targeted another author in some very nasty ways.
He removed himself from the group when he found out I knew what he was up to, thankfully.
Just despicable.




The first book in the series isn't there anymore. I wonder if she removed it because she got so many 1 star reviews in retaliation.


It made me laugh to think she is asking a successful author to stand down so that she has a chance to make a success of working off the success of others!

It mad..."
My thoughts exactly.
On a newspaper forum, somebody made the brilliant point that because publishing is profit driven, and Bloomsbury made millions out of HP, Bloomsbury now have the money to take more chances on unknown writers and experimental fiction. So, JK Rowling's success has actually done a lot to help niche fiction and new talent. We could do with more like her.

From the point of view of writers (and readers) JK is a win-win :-)

On a newspaper forum, somebody made the brilliant point that because publishing is profit driven, and Bloomsbury made millions out of HP, Bloomsbury now have the money to take more chances on unknown writers and experimental fiction. So, JK Rowling's success has actually done a lot to help niche fiction and new talent. We could do with more like her. "
In theory yes... in practise, the experimental novel, at least in the UK, is dead as far as conventional publishers are concerned.

Just you wait until my experimental novel is unleashed upon an unsuspecting publisher:
'Navel fluff from the abyss,' a story of mutant navel fluff terrorising High Wycombe :)

I have to say though (as a massive fan of Harry Potter) that "The Casual Vacancy" is the biggest disappointment ever... I am still stuck on chapter 5 because I can't stand the content! I should never have bought it and it should not have got the hype it did. I can understand the bitter grapes, but no one can tell anyone what they can write. If people want to buy it, then it will sell - the end! However, I will never buy one of her adult books again - that speaks louder than anything else. If an author does not deliver, another one will.
We live in a world where people will do what advertising tells them to... If word of mouth tells you something is good you will read it, if they tell you it's terrible you will be even more curious! Human nature - we are irrational! I love it! :)

Rowling - almost singly-handedly - brought a whole generation into reading (including both my daughters and maybe my son too) and for that we should be grateful.

I may be overreacting somewhat.

I may be overreacting somewhat."
This thread has been Godwined and now must terminate.

There's probably thousands of kids out there who will continue to read because Rowling put them on that path. As a kid, Enid Blyton did it for me and in a world dominated by technology, which pulls kids away from literature, this is something that shouldn't be ignored. There's hope for young readers yet and Rowling is probably a major factor in this.
J.K Rowling may not be everyone's cup of tea but she deserves respect for her work.


This made me chuckle ha ha.


This begs the questions: if these comments are an actual reflection of the writer's talent, why the rant? And why is the rant written in a style so very different from her books? Could the rant have been a form of sarcasm, or perhaps a twisted marketing ploy? (Didn't work, judging from her sales rank).
Does anyone know if she's commented further on this?

In the olden days people would have to go out and buy your books before they could burn them.
Nowadays, they don't have to buy the books at all, they can just leave nasty reviews on Amazon.




It's like nazi Germany!
Oh buggering botherations, I did it again.

I just love escapism, especially when you involve trolls, dragons, wizards, magic, etc...
JK Rowling is a legend for HP, and the legacy she left behind for children is awesome.
Unfortunately, TCV just made me depressed. But, I do know a friend of mine loved it exactly because it was so raw. We are all different and entitled to like different things as readers. This is why the range of books on offer is so vast. As writers, we all want to say different things - this is a good thing :)

Potter very clearly transitioned from being "middle grade" (i.e. a kids book) to being young adult. Something that in itself was very clever for keeping its audience -- the books grew as Harry grew, and as the readers grew. And that I think is part of the reason for its success - the readers didn't outgrow the books before the series finished.

The fact that he was rather stout.
He thought: "If only I were thin!
But how does anyone begin?
Holds a lot more truth now than when I was six...
(A.A. Milne, if anyone is wondering. Most definitely "kids" stuff, yet I can still quote loads of it from memory! I loved those books when I was little, and still do now.)

http://ingeb.org/songs/jamesjam.html
Hey Patti - you should read THIS to your kidlets!

That is interesting, her low sales ranking might just prove how utterly irrelevant these accolades actually are.

There is probably at least one website that features literary feuds for those that find them interesting.

By that reckoning I'm pretty well guaranteed a place in the A level syllabus :-(

By th..."
I still hope that one day someone will acuse me of selling out.
Jim, your books are far too readable to be set texts.
I can't think of a quicker way to ruin your career before it even starts.