Why Do You Continue Writing even if you aren’t on the NY
Times Bestseller List? Andrea Stein author of Rough Harbor
But to your dismay,
Aunt Sue calmly keeps eating turkey, unimpressed. Why? Probably because Aunt Sue has never
actually read the NY Times and couldn’t care less about it. All Aunt Sue wants is to read a book she
likes.
Writing shouldn’t be about winning awards or making some
list. It should be about writing something you love – and because you couldn’t
imagine doing anything else. Because you
would do it if no one paid you a penny.
However, most writers harbor slightly different ambitions. Fame and
fortune. Or perhaps recognition and
enough money so we don’t have to get real jobs.
As a writer, I certainly write to please myself – but I also
write to please the readers in my genre – who will hopefully become “my readers”. Approval – in the form of reviews, comments,
word of mouth and yes sales, all mean that my writing is doing what I intend to
do – moving people in some way. If
you’re writing is good, then it will move enough people, and while you or I may
never make a best seller list, that’s not what important.
The recognition and the happiness you can bring to someone
with a book is profound. I remember
being on bed rest during one of my pregnancies, worried sick about the health
of my baby and looking to the books I read during that time to provide an
escape, a sense of comfort and happiness. I can still recall my reading list
for that time today. Everything turned out fine, but my use of books is
common. As readers we use books to
transport ourselves. And a good book
does just that. A good book doesn’t have
to be great literature or win any prizes.
A good book makes an impression on the reader, even if it’s just a few hours of
entertainment on a cold winter night.
And that being said, with the rise of ebooks, you can still
be pretty successful as an author without making it onto a best seller
list. All you need is to write books
that hit the spot for just enough readers to become fans. Even a relative small fan base, one that
Stephen King would sniff out, can be just what another author needs to be able
to do nothing but write. You may not get
to ride around in fancy limousines or vacation in Paris, but heck – it sure
beats working.
Writing is one of the best jobs you can have – but maybe
that’s because I have always lived in my imagination a lot. I would read a book
as a kid, like Treasure Island, and be able to play out in my head a whole new
adventure from that – now they call it fan fiction, but back then I was just
the geeky girl who loved to read. So for
me, writing has nothing to do with being on a list. It has everything to do
with creating an environment that’s rich enough people believe it’s a reality –
even if only for the length of time they spend in the book.
Sure – would I love to be on the New York Times bestseller
list? Will I be – I don’t know. I can’t control that – all I can control is
working on my writing and creating books that people want to read…the other
stuff will come if you do that.
Thanks so much for the opportunity to stop by,
Andrea
You are so welcome. I'm glad to have you. I loved your post too. And now, here's a blurb and excerpt from Rough Harbor.
BLURB:
After a bitter break up and professional set
back in London, twenty seven year old Caitlyn has returned to Queensbay to work
for Maxwell Randall, an old family friend, at his financial management firm. So far, bit by bit, Caitlyn’s been rebuilding
all she lost after Michael St. John broke her heart …and tried to ruin her
professional reputation.
But her past comes back to haunt her when Maxwell unexpectedly turns
up dead. Not only does Caitlyn find her
career in jeopardy but her heart is too, when Noah Randall, Maxwell’s son, and
her first love, returns to Queensbay.
Once, ten years ago, Caitlyn was sure Noah was the one for her…but the
tragedy of her grandfather’s suicide and Noah’s decision to leave town left her
bereft…and determined never to trust him again.
Over the past decade, she’s managed to do her best to forget about
Noah Randall and the lingering questions surrounding her grandfather’s
suicide. But now that’s he back in town
– rich and more handsome than ever, and she can’t help wondering what if? What
if Noah really was the one?
Noah Randall left home ten years ago to seek his fortune – vowing
never to return until he’d made a success of himself – and show Caitlyn
Montgomery just what she’d given up. He
returns to find that Caitlyn Montgomery has only grown more alluring with time.
Noah’s always wanted he couldn’t have…and now he wants Caitlyn again. But she’s determined not to make the same
mistake twice.
Excerpt:
Caitlyn Montgomery carefully let herself in the side door
with the key hidden under the flowerpot. Police tape fluttered along the back
of the house, the side that faced the water, but here, under the small
overhang, there was nothing, only a chilly October breeze and the more distant
sound of the water lapping at the rocky shore.
The house was quiet, the silence of sadness. Her footsteps
echoed across the polished wood flooring of the hallway as she crossed onto the
marble tiles of the foyer. She knew it well, had almost grown up here, and had
spent many nights here in the recent months, playing chess and sipping whisky
with an old man.
The door to Maxwell Randall’s study swung silently open.
Caitlyn crossed the floor quickly, her sneakered feet sinking into the plush
carpet. She came around to Maxwell’s desk, an ornate, obnoxious thing meant to
look like something a Gilded Age Robber Baron would have owned.
It was just as he’d left it. Empty. Maxwell hadn’t been one
for bringing work home, she discovered. His desk was clear, a simple blotter
aligned in the middle. A phone off to the right, a brass lamp off to the left.
A pad of paper and a can of pens and pencils sat within reach. There was no
computer, no planner or desk diary. She supposed if there had been one, the
police would have taken it.
Slowly, methodically, she leaned over and began to open the
desk drawers. Nothing in the two large ones flanking the right, nor the left.
She turned her attention to the middle drawer, the thin one. It stuck a bit,
and she felt her heart flutter in anticipation. She knelt down, to get a better
view. Caitlyn pushed a strand of her brown-black hair behind her ear and
squinted in concentration as she carefully slid her hands toward the back of
the narrow drawer.
“What are you doing?”
Her head jerked up, hitting the side of the drawer as she
rose to her feet.
“You?” Caitlyn said, surprise radiating through her.
There was a pause. Caitlyn drew herself up to her full
height and looked at Noah Randall, all six-feet-one of him, standing in the
doorway.
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Hi, I’,
Andrea Stein an author, mother, wife and blogger and a certified mom-chauffeur.
I have been scribbling stories for as long as I can remember, including my
first adventure story, inspired by an obsession with Out of Africa (book, movie
and biography) about a young girl stranded in Kenya. It was serial fiction handwritten,
given to my sister, who couldn’t read my handwriting. That story dies after one
installment, but the next year I got a word processor (not a computer, but an
ACTUAL WORD PROCESSOR) that showed about twenty lines of text at a time. This
was before laptops were widely available and this allowed me to be able to type
to my heart’s content in the privacy of my own room. Which I did. I think I
spent the time writing stories about my “frenemies” to amuse myself. I also
listened to a lot of the Cure and New Wave music. I have since moved on to a
happier place.
Even though I
read lots of different types of books, I write romance novels with a twist.
More like contemporary romance than romantic suspense (I don’t write about
serial killers or FBI agents) but I usually like to include a puzzle or mystery
for my hero and heroine to solve.
Rough Harbor
is my second novel, set in a small New England town. Coming soon is Ivy
Cottage, also set in a small New England town on a river.
Other than
writing I spend most of my time reading, watching TV, cooking, cleaning, taking
care of kids, trying to keep the house clean and folding laundry. I love
Twizzlers, chocolate and shows on the WB. For me, reading has always been an
escape, a way to escape the ordinary and dive into a world that feels real –
but with all of the ‘boring’ parts edited out.
As for the
rest of my life, I grew up on Long Island, spent a lot of vacations in small
New England towns, went to college in New York City, married by high school
sweetheart, worked, had kids, stopped working, and kept on writing. Now I live
in rural New Jersey (yes, there is such a thing), and though I don’t own any
horses, I do have a barn, which I share with squirrels.
There’s
something successful writers always tell new writers about their secret to
success. Just do it…Bum Glue…write 1ooo words a day…write for two hours a
day….Keep writing. And they’re right. I got more successful with my writing
when I started to do it consistently. I don’t write every day, but I shoot for
five days a week. This means that the words and pages pile up — and I have
stories to shape, make and mold…and share.
I hope you
enjoy my books, currently available at www.amazon.com
Links –
Website:
www.Andreasteinbooks.com
http://www.facebook.com/AndreaSteinBooks
https://twitter.com/andreasteinbook
It's great that you are doing what you like, Rough Harbor is a great book you can be proud to have published it!
ReplyDeletelennascloud at gmail dot com
Thank you for hosting today.
ReplyDeleteI don't think many make it to that list, but it doesn't mean they are not successful as writer. You don't seem like the type to only write for fame and fortune to me and honestly if one is doing something one likes it shows in the work.
ReplyDeletemoonsurfer123(at)gmail(dot)com
You're right, anas. It would show. Most authors I know write because they have to. Writing is as necessary to them as oxygen.
DeleteAh well, some people are hard to impress, but as long as there are enough people who like what you write and care and support you, what does it matter, right?
ReplyDeletegalaschick78 at gmail dot com
Thanks for hosting me today - and you're right - I write because I have to - I always see things and think about what it would be like as a scene in a story...now, at this point in my life I have tried to be more committed to making all those scenes work together as book(s)...it feels great when that happens --- and it has nothing to do with how well the book will sell...
ReplyDeleteAndrea
I tend to live in my head a lot, too...great post!
ReplyDeletevitajex(at)aol(dot)com
I hope you make the NY Times Bestseller List very soon.
ReplyDeleteKit3247(at)aol(dot)com
Good luck with reaching your goal, I'm sure you'll manage it!
ReplyDeleteshadowrunner1987 at gmail dot com
Lovely post. That's great you're a writer.
ReplyDeletebn100candg(at)hotmail(dot)com
It is a great post. I know that you will find more readers with this tour.
ReplyDeletemarypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
I can tell when i read a book if the author loves what he or she does. Your excerpt lets me know that you do love writing.
ReplyDeleteSo happy to be introduced to this book.
ReplyDeletegmapeony@yahoo.com
Thanks for all the great comments and well wishes...keeps me going when everything around me (a case of the flu, sick kids, etc) seems destined to get in the way.
ReplyDeleteAndra
Sorry for the late post. I’m playing catch-up here so I’m just popping in to say HI and sorry I missed visiting with you on party day! Hope you all had a good time!
ReplyDeletekareninnc at gmail dot com