THE JAMES MASON COMMUNITY BOOK CLUB discussion
Authors and Their Books
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Define success
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If you are happy with your life, then you have succeeded at the most important part - it you are happy writing, you have succeeded at a small part. The number of books sold are a measure of the current trend as in the taste of readers, not in your ability. Tastes change - scifi, westerns, espionage, war stories etc we may all be dead before we succeed :-o)
Remember - Nothing succeeds better than a budgie with out teeth. The older I get the worse the jokes get.
Peace of mind, peace of wallet, piece of snatch. Life is good.:XD

I define the measure of an author’s success by how happy they are while writing their books. I write books. I sell books. People tell me they like my books. Though I have not received tremendous sales they have been steady these last two years and with the virtual bookshelf in existence forever, who knows how far I could go?
Success is defined and measured differently by different people. Just a few short years ago (since 2007 when Kindle first came out) a struggling writer’s success was measured in just two ways; traditionally published or not. Self-publishing and indie publishing were sure signs of failure, even though the author never even had his work tested in the mainstream readership.
I had a powerful, NY agent who loved my books but after four years of trying and wooing the big houses he still couldn’t sell a single one. Does that make me a failure? Since that time, I’ve sold thousands of ebooks through Kindle, Nook, and Kobo and gotten some really great reviews. Does that make me a success?
One’s own perception of success and failure are deeply personal issues and different for all of us. Though I haven’t achieved rock star/writer fame (yet), the mere fact that my stuff is out there and gets read is enough for me to label my twenty-plus writing career a success. Though I may never achieve the heights of Stephen King or Clive Cussler, with the advent of digital publishing at least I (we all) have a fair stake in the publishing game.
My blog: http://www.neilostroff.blogspot.com