James Patterson's success is astonishing.
- Patterson has written, or co-written, 147 novels. Of these, 114 were New York Times Best Sellers.
- 67 of Patterson's best selling books have made it to the top spot on the New York Times Best Sellers list. At the moment, Patterson holds the Guinness World Record for the number of New York Times bestselling books written by a single author.
- Patterson's novels account for 1 in 17 of all hardcover novels sold in the United States.
- In the past few years, Patterson has sold more novels than Stephen King, John Grisham and Dan Brown combined.
- From 2008 he has been the most borrowed author in Britain’s libraries.
- Patterson has sold about 305 million copies of his books worldwide.
But perhaps the thing that startled me the most was that, in 1976, while Patterson was still a copywriter, he wrote his first book: The Thomas Berryman Number. In 1977, that book went on to win the Edgar Allan Poe award for Best First Novel. To read more about James Patterson, click here.
So, let’s get down to it: James Patterson has been insanely successful writing books that sell well. In the following I want to look at what we can learn from Patterson's practice and how we can apply those insights to our own work.
James Patterson's Work
I’ve begun many of Patterson’s books, but only finished one: Honeymoon. I finished that one because Patterson used it as an example to talk about his writing methods.
His writing, his style of writing just isn’t my cup of tea, but I have an enormous amount of respect for his work ethic and the success he has achieved over the course of his life.
So, how does he do it? (By the way, the quotations from James Patterson, below, are from World's Best-Selling Author James Patterson On How To Write An Unputdownable Story)
1. Be a very good storyteller.
It was Elmore Leonard who wrote, “Try to leave out the part that readers tend to skip.” Good advice.
Patterson says:
"I used to live across the street from Alexander Haig, and if I told you a story that I went out to get the paper and Haig was laying in the driveway, and then I went on for 20 minutes describing the architecture on the street and the way the palm trees were, you'd feel like "Stop with the description—what's going on with Haig?" I tend to write stories the way you'd tell them. I think it'd be tragic if everybody wrote that way. But that's my style. I read books by a lot of great writers. I think I'm an okay writer, but a very good storyteller."
Here's what I take from this:
- Leave out the boring bits.
- Write a story like you would tell it to a friend.
- Concentrate on telling a great story, not being a great writer.
- Find your story, your voice, and be true to it.
2. Give readers an intimate connection with your characters.
Patterson says:
"I try to put myself in every scene that I'm writing. I try to be there. I try to put the kind of detail in stories that will make people experience what the characters are experiencing, within reason."I wrote about the importance of making the story intimate a few days ago, only I used Stephen King's masterpiece of horror, "The Shining" as an example (see: []).
Now, of course, both men are VERY different writers. Stephen King demonstrates a level of skill with his craft few can match. But, just going from what both men have said about their work, it seems that Patterson is driven by—in this area at least—one of the same concerns as King.
And that makes sense. After all, this is a point about storytelling, not just writing.
My take away:
- Let your readers see the storyworld through your character's eyes.
- Let your readers see your character's thoughts. (See: Free Indirect Discourse: How To Create A Window Into A Character's Soul & Show vs Tell: Talking About The Narrator)
3. Keep chapters short.
James Patterson's books tend to have short chapters. I did some calculations and, from the four books I looked at, the average chapter length was about 640 words. That's only about three manuscript pages!
My take away:
- Pay attention to the average chapter lengths in your genre. From what I've found, chapters in Science Fiction novels—as well as Romance novels—tend to be around 3,000 words long. On the other hand, thrillers often have chapters of around 700 words.
4. Outline.
Outlining saves time. I know not everyone outlines; there are pantsers and there are plotters, and that's okay.
Patterson creates a fairly extensive outline; each chapter is summed up in about a paragraph of text. He says:
"Each chapter will have about a paragraph devoted to it. But you're gonna get the scene, and you're gonna get the sense of what makes the scene work."
Let's say the paragraph is 100 words long. If the chapter itself is only 700 words long, then the outline represents about 14% of the chapter's content!
My take away:
- Having an outline enables you to see logical problems in your story before you sit down to write it.
- It's better to send off a detailed outline to your editor and give them the chance to troubleshoot potential structural issues before you write 80,000 words (and find out you have to re-write 20,000 of them!).
5. Have an ideal reader.
Patterson says:
"I try to pretend that there's somebody across from me and I'm telling them a story and I don't want them to get up until I'm finished."
Stephen King uses an ideal reader as well, for King it's his wife, Tabitha King. He tries to write prose that will make her laugh, or cry, or chuckle. That is, to write prose that will evoke her emotions. A very similar idea to Pattersons.
My take away:
- When you write, write to someone, write to your Idea Reader. This person could be made up or it could be someone you know.
- If you use a flesh-and-blood Ideal Reader they should be someone who likes to read the sort of thing you write. Otherwise, things can get messy.
When I notice that two remarkably successful writers—successful in terms of books sold—do similar things even though their writing styles could not be more different, I try to incorporate those insights into my own writing practice.
That's it! I'll talk to you again on Monday. Between now and then I'll tweet a couple of writing prompts—I find them useful and thought I'd share!
Till then, good writing!