J.D. Robb discussion
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Did Roberts really write all these books?

I read Remember When, and it was hard to believe that the same person wrote the beginning part of the novel and then the second part of the novel!
I still love the series though. Eve Dallas is a fantastic character to read about.

In total, if someone else is writing them - keep it up, they are doing a good job!



I am in no way a romance genre kind of gal, but I have always like Nora Roberts style of writing. I've read almost all of her books and liked most of them. She often has a suspenseful or supernatural twist in her Nora books. While I don't like everything she has ever done, the first part of "Remember When" is totally her style when she writes as Nora. I don't have any trouble believing she could have written both.
Actually, I love the "In Death' books so much, I really don't care who's writing them as long as they don't start messing with the characters and making them different somehow, unless it's the character development that has been, up to now, exceptional.


She has also written under other names:
She wrote a story for a magazine titled "Melodies of Love" under the pseudonym Jill March.[16]
Roberts has also been known as Sara Hardesty. When the "Born In" series was released in Britain it carried that name instead of Nora Roberts.
Nora Roberts aka JD Robb

The different writing styles are kind of like a person behaving one way around 'the buds', another way around 'the parents', the offspring, the Law, the Clergy, work, etc... Not an act per se but a different aspect of a person. A person might cuss around this one or that one, but not those. Might listen to one style of music one place but not another. Doesn't mean a person is being fake.
I like LOTS of different music, foods, etc. I read lots of different types of books. They are all different aspects of me. My mind-set one way at work and another at the beach. I have my Mom hat, my daughter hat, my employee hat, and so on...
The same as someone writing under a different name...a different aspect, not fake, just different.

The different writing styles are kind of like a person behaving one way around 'the buds', another way around 'the parents', the offspring, the Law, the Clergy, work, etc..."
Very well said!



this is really stupid, but what is a ghostwriter????

I think a ghostwriter can be someone who helps write a book or writes the whole book under the original author's name. I'm not sure if it is even legal, but maybe if the original writer or the ones with the rights to the books gives permission. This is just a guess, though.

"A ghostwriter is a writer who writes on an assigned topic under someone else's name, with their consent. They often write books completely from scratch but sometimes their work involves rewriting or polishing an existing work.
Most books by famous personalities are actually written by ghostwriters. When you see an autobiography or memoir from a politician, businessperson, or celebrity, chances are that it has been written by a ghostwriter.
Here are a few examples. The autobiography "Ronald Reagan: An American Life" was ghosted by Robert Lindsey. “Learning to Sing”, the autobiography of American Idol star Clay Aiken, was written with ghostwriter Allison Glock. The autobiographies of Doris Day and Sophie Loren were written by A.E. Hotchner.
So how popular is ghostwriting? Statistics are hard to come by since many people don't want to reveal that their book is ghosted. Some industry estimates suggest that up to fifty percent of all non-fiction books are ghostwritten."
There is a whole lot more information there, I just googled 'what is a ghostwriter', and it brought up 'worldwide freelance' among others. That was the most informative tho...:)

Gathering from interview that i've seen of Nora, i feel like she wouldn't do that. She seems to really enjoy writing her own stories.

In biographies, the ghost doesn't have the information or memories. The celebrity doesn't have the writing skills. So, someone ghosts their memories into a book and everyone gets money.
In a work of fiction, it is different. Why would someone ghost a story and get less money than they would writing the story for themselves if the imagination and sweat-equity is theirs?

I would more align with those who think it's just another aspect of her personality. As an artist myself, I have never wanted to be pigeon-holed, and tend to like to enjoy -- and paint and design -- a variety of styles. It keeps life interesting. It is tiresome to be stuck in a box only creating one style of a thing, so I can see her wanting to explore another interest, another voice.
Personally, I'm not a fan of Nora Roberts, which may seem strange, but in fact I'm not a fan of romance novels. I personally wish the sex scenes in Robb's In Death books weren't so flowery -- I'm just no fan of the mush and gush, and I find that the flowery prose at that time goes against the character of Eve, too. But anyway, I really dig the character of Eve Dallas and the In Death series, and I like Roberts' voice when she writes as Robb. I'll keep reading. :c)






Considering the number of books she releases in a year, I'm not surprised that the last couple of ID books were just so-so for me. (Loved Treachery though)

As to whether Robb/Roberts writes all of her books or has a ghostwriter, I can only comment on the ID series and compare it to some of the "joint venture" books published by some writers. In most cases, if I am familiar with what the writers generally produce on their own, I can tell which books have been written extensively by the other author.
Eric Flint is doing this with his "1632" SF series, Anne McCaffrey did it with the books that followed "The Ship That Sang". Several books written with characters established by a deceased author have been very obviously written by someone else.
The style that is characteristic of Robb's handling of her ID characters and their interaction seems to not have this "off" taint to me.



Ok and someone remind me what the preacher one was again. I usually know this stuff, so my brain must be mush right now.


Ok and someone remin..."
Salvation!!

I've read all her ID books, most of her trilogies and all of her single suspense titles. The writing style, the word choices, the cadences are soooo similar across all the books that you can tell it is her. Her style is very distinctive. So much so that it is a nit I pick when I review her books.
Her most recent suspense book Chasing Fire had a couple who were trying to figure out who was killing these people and I swear it could have been Eve and Roarke working through a case.
So all that --- and the fact that her love scenes in all her books are written using the same metaphorical language -- you know when the author uses colors, and storms and space travel to describe sex rather than, well, sexy words -- leads me to think she's just a writing machine.

I want to say I read somewhere that she really does treat this like her job (which it is)—she gets up and writes from like 8 to 5 every day. But it's STILL incredible that she cranks out 2 NR and 2 JD Robb books a year, PLUS a JD Robb novella! Does she write a NR novella each year, too? I don't really read NR, so I don't know.
It's so funny, because I used to read Meg Cabot's blog, and she is NOT that dedicated to writing (or so it seemed), although she spits out 2 or 3 books a year. One is a kid's book, so that's not AS impressive, but still—usually 1 adult, 1 YA, and 1 kid book. But she's like, "I get up, drink coffee, eat breakfast, check my email for an hour, get a snack, write a bit, then eat lunch, then check my email, then write a bit, then get a snack, then check the latest celebrity gossip, then write a bit..." haha... I don't know how she gets anything done!

So perhaps she has some help here and there, but if it is so obvious that one book sounds very different from the others, it is a pretty good sign that she probably actually writes most of them herself

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/...
Books mentioned in this topic
Fantasy in Death (other topics)Fantasy in Death (other topics)
Chasing Fire (other topics)
Anyone have the same feeling?