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I am SoCalScribe. This is my InkSpot.
Blogocentric Formulations
#832479 added October 27, 2014 at 6:55pm
Restrictions: None
There is no Safe Haven from The Notebook
Welcome to Talent Pond's Blog Harbor. The safe place for bloggers to connect.


PROMPT: Are any recognizable authors from your hometown/current town? Have you read them?


Authors who were born and/or spent a considerable portion of their life growing up in Sacramento:

          *X* Dale Brown
          *X* Joan Didion
          *Check1* Nicholas Sparks
          *Check1* Cornel West

I've only read one of Nicholas Sparks' novels cover to cover:

ASIN: 0446693804
Product Type: Book
Amazon's Price: $ 10.00


I have, however, either watched the movie adaptation of, or read part of the following:

         The Notebook
         Message in a Bottle
         The Rescue
         Nights in Rodanthe
         Dear John
         The Choice
         The Lucky One
         The Last Song
         Safe Haven

I can pretty much sum up my feelings about Nicholas Sparks in four words... he's a terrible writer. If I were to make a list of authors whose work I enjoyed the least, it would include Stephenie Meyer and Nicholas Sparks at the very top. I'm not even going to get into a Twilight rant here and will keep this exclusively limited to Sparks, whose work I find to be unoriginal, blatantly exploitative in its melodrama, and written without much style or substance. I was thinking of a way to describe the fact that I feel like every Nicholas Sparks book is the same recycled plot with slightly different twists, but Cracked put it better than I ever could  .

I know everyone has their own personal tastes when it comes to books - and there are a great many Nicholas Sparks fans out there, my wife included - but it annoys me to no end when a writer essentially finds a successful formula and just repeats it over and over and over again in what I can only assume is an attempt to cash in. See also: Dan Brown and James Patterson. I fully recognize the fact that someone could probably choose an author I like and point out that they're the same way ... and I'm certainly not advocating that every piece of writing has to be highbrow "literature" ... but it's infuriating to see someone write pedestrian stories and receive wide acclaim for them, because I feel like it encourages what Terry Rossio so eloquently called the Crap-plus-One   mentality, i.e. the opinion that, "Hey, if someone like that can get produced, then all I have to do is write something slightly better than that crap!" *Facepalm* There's a lot more to getting a book published or a movie made than writing "just a little better" than someone else, but when you read work like Sparks' and see his book sales, I definitely see where the temptation is for someone to try to imitate or only do slightly better than that and expect their own work to succeed wildly.

I might be extrapolating a little too much here, though. The honest truth is that (as evidenced from the list above), I keep trying Nicholas Sparks' books and other than A Walk to Remember, which was also a slog, I just couldn't get through any of his other books because they bored me. So thank goodness for Cornel West, 'cause I'm not particularly proud of the fact that Nicholas Sparks grew up in Sacramento. *Wink*

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