Luck is what determines the success or
failure of a novel.
I’ve heard this statement a great deal lately, and not only
do I disagree with the logic (or apparent lack thereof), I find it a bit
insulting to anyone who has ever accomplished any measure of success in any
field.
I personally don’t accept that luck even exists, especially with
respect to how people often perceive it.
As defined by
Websters: A force that brings good fortune or adversity
As per Wikipedia:
…good fortune which occurs beyond one’s
control, without regard to one’s will, intention, or desired result.
Websters appears to indicate luck is a form of energy that
might be measurable. In this sense, which I suspect is prevalent in the
mainstream consciousness, luck is a myth, a form of superstition.
In the Wikipedia version, the word luck appears to be a way of giving a name to almost any event that
the witness is incapable of understanding. Luck is then another word for magic.
Lightning was believed to be magic too, until it was understood.
My take is to argue that luck is nothing more than
mathematical probability. Yet because the numbers and variables are so vast and
varied, most people can’t calculate a definite probability for success, so it’s easier to
believe the results to be magic, or the more socially acceptable term: luck.
To clarify just a bit, I think luck is actually the
mathematical probability of a random event occurring. If you subscribe to the
concept that luck is what determines if a
novel becomes a success then you should also understand that this same rule
applies to everything (because it would be silly to think luck only applies to
novels.) Your chance of graduating college, getting cancer, or winning gold at the
Olympic games is all a matter of luck.
Consider what the chances are of a person getting a novel on the bestseller’s
list if they never wrote a book, sought out a publisher, had any dealings with
agents or other literary types, and isn’t famous? I’m guessing most people are
thinking zero. However if luck is the only factor in publishing success, then
this person who never wrote a book, or had interest in doing so, would stand an
equal chance of hitting that coveted list as someone who spent years perfecting
their craft, submitted novels to traditional publishers, and even tried self
publishing.
At this point I hope it’s obvious that it isn’t JUST luck.
On the other hand, those who guessed the person in the above paragraph has a
zero chance, would be wrong. Everyone stands at least a one percent chance.
(Even a person who doesn’t play the lottery might find a winning ticket among
dead leaves along a curb.) I know this is true because I met a man at Balticon who
is being pursued by major publishers and literary agents even though he knows
nothing about writing, isn’t famous, and has no interest in writing books. He
merely stumbled on something they think will sell, blogged about it, and now it
has gone viral. He will likely—through no effort or intention on his part—have
a bestseller on his hands. Does this prove luck exists? No, it proves everyone
has a base chance of one.
If you play the lottery and buy two tickets instead of one, you’ve doubled your
odds. Can buying two tickets make you twice as lucky? Or is it just doubling
your mathematical probability? If you buy all the tickets you’ve improved your
odds to a sure thing. When you win, will it still be luck? If you write a great
book and promote it well, do you think you will stand a better or worse chance
of getting lucky than if you write an awful book and never promote it?
Does that mean a person with a great book and great marketing will be a bestseller? No. Just as a
person who doesn’t try can sometimes win, so too can a person who does
everything right still fail, but the odds of this happening are just as small
as a person winning the lottery with just one ticket.
So baring the small possibility that you will hit that one percent of “bad
luck” then you can significantly increase your probability by writing and
promoting well. The corollary of that then says if your sales are low the fault
lies with either the quality of your book, and/or the effectiveness of your
marketing. Authors don’t like to hear this. One person recently accused me of
being cruel to aspiring authors for stating such. (Not that I deny having been
cruel to aspiring authors, just ask anyone in my critique group.) I simply feel
that being polite doesn’t help an author make a bad book better. Lying to them,
or remaining silent will only leave them floundering in the dark and condemned
to an endless prison of failure. Explaining the problem—as unpleasant as it is
to hear—grants writers the chance to fix their problems.
The real issue comes up when authors who think they are good don’t know the meaning of that word when it applies to selling novels. There are those who spend
significant time and money perfecting their craft and yet get nowhere. These
are often people with masters and PhDs in writing and literature who declare success
must not be about skill, but rather based on sheer luck—because if it was all
about skill, they would be successful. What they fail to understand is that
good prose, originality, and wonderful sub-text doesn’t necessarily translate
into sales success. Even critical acclaim doesn’t necessarily generate
significant sales. Don’t believe me, look up the list of the bestselling novels
of all time then compare that to the list of Pulitzer Prize winners.
But not all popular
books are good!
I’m not talking about the subjective judgment of good verses
bad writing here, (if you want that see my
previous post on objectively badbooks,) I’m speaking of successful books. And while an argument could be made
that one person’s definition of success is not equal to another’s, I’m willing
to go out on a limb and state that the majority of authors see financial
independence as the primary indicator of success. An award is nice, but the
ability to buy your mother a house in cash, never have money concerns again,
and being able to write full-time is priceless. Whenever I speak to writers and
ask what their big dream is, the answer always comes back: “A #1 book on the
NYT Bestseller’s List.” People would choose this over the wish of eating all
they want while magically remaining at their ideal weight. Some may covet
critical success over millions of readers, I just haven’t met any yet. I’ve
never once heard anyone saying their goal is winning a Pulitzer, Man Booker, Noble,
or Nebula. That sort of desire for acclaim might come after financial success
is achieved, but by then the writer is already considered successful. So if you
concede that the reason a writer publishes a book is for number of readers and money, a good book—in
this discussion—is then by definition, a book that sells a high number of
copies at a price-point that provides a substantial financial reward to the
author. And books that sell a high number of copies are those that strike a
chord in readers, not necessarily those containing the best prose or the most
original ideas.
Isn’t hitting that chord luck?
No more so than winning the lottery. It’s still probability. You improve your
odds by writing what the majority of people will appreciate. Some people know
how to do this better than others. Many authors have narrow tastes, and write
to that target audience alienating the majority of potential readers, but
greatly satisfying a niche of fans. Those who sell big are the authors who can
reach a vast audience and touch them on a fundamental level. I suspect they can
do this because they
are their
audience. They write what they want to read, and are not constrained by what
they think they
ought to write. Neil
Gaiman, in his commencement speech in Arizona, (
see previous post), mentioned
that people often achieve their dreams because they didn’t know they couldn’t.
That those who know better, don’t try. If Stephanie Meyers knew the idiocy of
writing a cliché ridden vampire romance novel, she likely would not have. If I
had known that writing a traditional heroic fantasy filled with exhausted
tropes such as elves and dwarves was a roll-your-eyes awful idea, I might have
passed too. I suspect a great deal of successful ventures are successful
because the creators never knew what they were
supposed to do and just did what they
wanted to
do
. Ironically they ended up satisfying themselves
and thousands of others. This sounds simple, but it isn’t. For those who constantly manage it, this is a talent
despite how much people want to believe it’s mere luck.
So to succeed in publishing you need to know how to write what people want to
read, and be able to write it in the way those same people want to read it. Then
you need to present it well and advertise it effectively. Then, baring that one
percent of failure, your odds of producing a bestseller are similar to your
purchasing almost all the tickets being sold for a lottery. The problem is that
doing all those things correctly is impossibly hard, and it is made harder when
the prevailing wisdom insists success is determined either by conforming to the
traditions laid out by unsuccessful writers or by sheer luck.
So you can believe that success has nothing to do with talent, skill, tenacity,
or ambition—that it’s all just luck—but if that is indeed true…why even try?
The results will be the same no matter what you do or don’t do.