It is my pleasure to introduce Vicki Hinze, the award-winning,
bestselling author of 30 novels, 4 nonfiction books and hundreds of
articles. She’s a columnist on the
Social In network, sponsors The Book
Club Network, and Christians Read. Her
latest inspirational release is Torn Loyalties, the third book in
her Love Inspired Suspense, Lost, Inc. series, and general
audience release is Maybe This Time, a
paranormal romantic thriller. Visit her
on FB, Twitter, Pinterest or at www.vickihinze.com.
Most writers write because they have something to say they
want others to hear. Something that the
writer deems significant enough to sacrifice time doing other things—children
and family and hobbies—to say. Writing
requires sacrifice. That’s pretty common
knowledge among writers, but I’m not sure if readers are aware of it. More importantly, and this is the focus of
what I want to share here, is that readers touch writers and impact
them in ways readers probably aren’t aware.
Touched, these writers take the insights and wisdom shared with them by
readers and incorporate that wisdom and insight into future stories the authors
write—and the circle of interaction between readers and authors continues, and
the reader’s ripple of influence broadens.
Many readers never realize that they’re a significant part
of the process, but they are. An
extremely significant part of the process.
Let’s look at how.
1. Publishers buy books readers want to read. If reader reaction to a book is good, then
publishers want more books of that type.
If reader reaction isn’t good, then no matter how much a publisher loves
a book, the editor won’t buy it because the editor has to buy books s/he loves and s/he can sell. That’s essential to the health of the
publisher. So readers define the types of
books made available to them by their reactions to the books they read and
support.
2. Booksellers stock the books their customers
want to buy. It’s simple supply and
demand. If a bookseller doesn’t have the
books readers want, then that bookseller won’t sell books, which it must do to stay
in business. So readers tell the
bookseller what they want, and the bookseller seeks out those books and makes
sure they’re available in his/her store.
Readers influence what books are in their bookstores and available to
the readers.
3. Readers through word-of-mouth influence
other readers. When a reader loves a
book and speaks well of it to other readers, then other readers are more likely
to develop interest in a book—whether or not the other readers are familiar with
the author. There is nothing better for
a book than a strong “buzz” among readers.
“Buzz” is word-of-mouth, a personal recommendation, and a reader’s
personal recommendation is the strongest recommendation. It’s personal, trusted, seated in the personal
relationship between readers. So
readers lift or lower a book with other readers, and introduce authors new to
other readers, through their word of mouth.
4. Readers have amazing influence over
writers. This is largely
under-reported and under-realized, but readers’ responses and reactions
directly to authors are probably the most influential factor in impacting what
authors write and why they write what they write.
As stated earlier, writers write because they have something
to say they want others to hear. The
vehicle for saying what they want to say is the story. So when a reader reacts to that story, the
author’s desire is fulfilled and validated—provided the reader reacts in the
way the author hoped. That’s a blessing
to the author, who spends much time alone creating and hoping that exactly this
will happen. Let me share a personal
example.
When my dad died, my mom went into shock. She couldn’t stay alone and so came to live
with my family. I focused on helping her
cope, helping my three children cope with the loss of their grandfather and its impact on their
grandmother. I really didn’t have the
luxury of time to mourn. I wrote a book
about this. The book was delayed in
being made available to readers—for six years.
That was a long delay I really didn’t understand at the
time. Maybe it wasn’t meant to be shared?
Maybe it had served its purpose in helping me get through grief? But it did sell and then publishing was
delayed two years, making the total six years between writing and
publication. Shortly after it was
published, the reason for the delays became clear.
I received a note from a reader asking me to call her, and I
did. I had no idea what to expect—but I
couldn’t have imagined what she said.
The reader told me a story of death and loss in her own
family and her utter desolation. She
felt hopeless and despairing and couldn’t see a way forward; she too wanted to
die. But when in a store with her young
daughter, her daughter grabbed my book off the shelf and said, “Mom, you need
to read this.” When asked why, the girl
told her, “It will help you.”
And so the mom bought the book and then read it.
She wanted me to know that, grieving and mourning and lost,
she read the book and found encouragement and hope and that it helped her see that
a way to live beyond grief existed. The
characters found it and she could, too. She
wanted to say thank you—and to let me know that the book had made a difference
in her life. Now she could see her way
to keep living.
As you can imagine, I was in tears. At the affirmation and confirmation the
reader had gifted me with as an author, but also in sheer gratitude that this
woman who was hopeless had found hope.
The dark tunnel of grief had lost its death grip on her!
It was in this reader’s
feedback that I found my mission to write books with constructive solutions to
difficult challenges many of us face.
This reader profoundly influenced me and my work. She gave me insight to my personal
purpose. She touched my life and all of
my future works. She will continue to
influence me forever.
My story isn’t unique.
I spoke with Robin Lee Hatcher about this, which led to an
interesting exchange that might surprise readers. Robin said, “It
is so easy for a writer to get discouraged. We spend a great deal of time alone
with our own thoughts and imaginations. A dangerous place. And the present
turmoil in the publishing industry can make this discouragement even
worse. But then a reader reaches out and tells you something like this message
that I received this summer:
‘I am an avid
reader and have been for many years, but I've never contacted an author before.
But, I wanted to share how the book Beyond the Shadows changed my life ... When I read your
book in May, I did so with sobs. I didn't quite realize why I could identify
with the main character, her husband being an alcoholic, mine just angry. I
felt hopeless and for the first time could relate to someone, even if it was
just a fictional book ... [description of a troubled marriage and
the reconciliation and healing that has followed] ... Throughout this
process many people have asked me what made me seek change, and I say,
God sent me a little fictional book that desperately made me want to get beyond
the shadows of the emotional pain. So, I want to say how grateful I am. I'll
always remember your book and the pain I felt when reading it, but now it's
only a Remembrance. God has provided a miracle for us.’”
I listened
with a knot in my throat. And Robin went
on to add, “An email like this provides me with enormous encouragement. It
reminds me that I am doing what God called me to do, and that I must look
beyond the discouragement and persevere. I never know how God will use the
words I write. My job is to be obedient. The end results are up to Him.”
Now not all
reader feedback is positive or constructive.
Some readers don’t like a book and feel compelled to say so. There’s no surprise in that; if we all liked
the same type of book, we’d collectively need fewer books and fewer authors. But that doesn’t mean that the reader’s
negative feedback is without value.
Often readers see an author veering off-track, so to speak, and let
him/her know. This can be a welcome
wakeup call to the author. Readers
help authors stay on track.
Of course
there is also feedback that isn’t constructive.
But that is easy to spot and given the weight it is worth. It’s amazingly easy to discern constructive
versus destructive feedback, and most authors don’t judge. They differentiate between constructive and
destructive feedback. In all feedback,
they seek the good. Rarely have I
encountered an author who neglects the gems of wisdom and insight in constructive negative feedback.
My point is that readers touch
lives. They touch authors, influence them, and
their feedback is cherished. Let me
share a bit of a discussion had with my fellow Christians Read author, Kathi Macias. (I feel a special affinity with Kathi since
we both have written books warning about human-trafficking and its dangers.) When
asked, Kathi recalled a specific reader and a specific event:
“I will never
forget this one. I was sitting at a book-signing when a young man (about 17)
came up to me and said, “Mrs. Macias, I just wanted to come here and tell you
that I read all four books in your Extreme
Devotion series, and they made me want to lead a noble life.” It really
doesn’t get any better than that, does it?”
A noble life, I thought. Constructive. Solutions. Elevating and entertaining. Encouraging.
Inspiring. No, it really
doesn’t get any better than that. And it
would be utterly impossible not to expect that this reader encounter wouldn’t
influence future Kathi Macias’ works.
Readers are a treasured,
significant part of the entire process.
From preferences on what they want to read to supporting and purchasing
the books they prefer, from sharing their opinions through word-of-mouth and in
their feedback to authors on what they’ve read, readers influence . . . because
readers
touch lives.v
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Wow, those are some powerful stories. Thanks so much for sharing, and hope I have my own like that to share someday.
ReplyDeleteGreat post Vicki--so nice to see you here on Marilee's blog. I love that you posted on this topic, because I think you're right--readers don't necessarily know just how they fit into the writer's world. Thanks for putting it all together like this!
ReplyDeleteHappy writing!
*waves at Marilee*
Angela Ackerman
"Waving back at Angela!"
DeleteI absolutely love this post. As writers, where would we be without readers? And, I totally agree with Vicki's statement about how much reader feedback means. When I hear from someone who's read my books, it makes my day.