VincentHobbes said:
I'm curious as to why you feel this way.
The guy below you puts it pretty well.
Attebery said:
I honestly can't see what pleasure he might derive from churning that product out. Money is nice, but that motivator can only last for so long. He doesn't strike me as a real writer. I don't see any sign that he writes anything he feels the need to say.
It's not an inspiring story to me because it looks like a marketing guy (apparently a millionaire before he even started) who set himself the goal of selling a lot of books, not writing interesting stories. And if your goal is purely shifting volume, then that's fine, but he's clearly not setting out with the greatest of artistic intentions. Locke seems to speak talk entirely in empty marketing-speak, like those people who follow you on Twitter with the bio of "SOCIAL MEDIA NETWORKING GURU" and whose only plan is following a bunch of people so they'll follow you back, with no content beyond that end. The whole thing of 'befriending' people into becoming his readers and sticking around for the next title doesn't sit well with me either. Of course, we must engage our audiences, but it's all so hollow and cynical, and when I'm reading lines on his website like...
Those who voted yes gave me brilliant reasons that inspired me! Those who voted no told me tragic stories that hurt my heart.... Your comments of support brought tears to my eyes.
... I'm thinking "Really?" Huh. In no way does that look like a writer's website either. It's got a total IMPORTANT NETWORKING GURU feel about it, or a self-help guy. I'd be interested to see if he ever did an interview about his creative process, of the writers that inspired him to put fingers to keyboard.
Nobody can deny that it worked for him, but he comes across as a marketer who decided books was the thing he'd have a go at, rather than a writer who writes because he
has to, because it's in him, and who'd still be writing stories if every other person in the world had disappeared. I'm sure plenty of us here know what that's like, and never leave home without a notepad or two. I don't get that feeling from Locke. There's totally a place for the airport thrillers that he churns out, and not everything has to be the Great American Novel, but I hate the idea that this is what indie authors should be aspiring to. Aspire to write something that'll blow people away, not whatever you can churn out the fastest, put up for 99 cents and have people buy because of what your research told you sells the best.