Is Imitation the Best Kind of Fan Flattery?

By Linh Ngan

In July, I released my 6th ebook, a labor of three years of love, a contemporary romance set in Qatar, called Love Comes Later. I waited to see what readers’ responses would be and was not disappointed at the latest self-taught lesson in writing, marketing, and publishing.

Two things stand out: 1) if academic work is for a select audience, then fiction is for everyone. And 2) if I want people near and far to have a crack at my book, then I have to stick with novels. You may disagree with me (which is allowed and please do share) but my stats don’t lie. In my previous eleven months of publishing electronic titles, I felt like a salmon going upstream. Trying to get reviews or bloggers to notice my book was tough. In the six weeks since this title has been out, there are 27 reviews and 43 likes. That’s more reviews than all the other books had a month after release and more downloads during the free period of any of my books to date.

 

I did also put quite a bit of PR muscle into this release and have to congratulate Sandra for her entry on the Kindle Fire giveaway as to how people fall in love and why e-readers are especially important for women. Maybe it was all the PR and not the genre.

 

Even so, my conclusion: People love a good novel more than memoir or short fiction. Many readers used social media to tell me they couldn’t put this book down. One said she read while she cooked. Another said she was in the process of finishing it and would have a surprise for me in a few days.

 

“What’s the surprise?” My husband asked. I had no idea. She had so intrigued him, he kept checking back with me.

 

“Did she tell you the surprise?”

 

A week later, I could say yes. She had loved the book so much, she didn’t want it to end. So she had written an epilogue for two of the two main characters! I’m sharing some of it with you here below. Her style is very different from mine – much sexier! – and as I read my characters’ names speaking lines I hadn’t written for them, I felt mixed emotions. On balance though, I’m taking it as it was intended – a positive sign that an aspiring writer took her hand to telling a story, imitating characters she admired.

 

How do you feel about fan fiction? Is it the ultimate compliment? Or like designer brands, is imitation worse than flattery?

 

Love Can Wait – Epilogue ** By DohaSu

 

Abdulla was adjusting his gutra in the mirror, when he caught Sangita looking at him.

 

“I promise we’ll find a new apartment.”

 

“Its okay, Fatima will always be a part of our lives.  As long as you’re okay with me adding a few personal touches…”

 

“Of course.”

 

Sangita removed her shayla and the pins that held her hair in a bun and shook her hair free.

 

“You know that you don’t have to wear it?”

 

“I want to. For you. I like the idea of you being the only man to see my hair and skin.”

 

Abdulla’s eyes burned with longing for Sangita and he strode over to embrace her. He’d been resisting doing this the last few weeks, as he’d been afraid that he would not be able to restrain himself. Though wounded, he’d accepted that he would not be her first but was contented to be the one and only from now on.

 

“I’ve been wanting to do this…” he said as he pulled her towards him and ran his fingers through her hair again and again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Wordless Wednesday: Jamaican Flowers

Cover of Jim Moorman’s book

Jamaica is on everyone’s mind this week with Usain Bolt’s spectacular performance at the Olympics. This is also the 50th year anniversary of Jamaica’s freedom from colonial rule.

Seems like the perfect week to host Jim Moorman, author of Jamaica Flowers, a  comedy about a father trying to stay out of prison while growing marijuana.Sonny Flowers is pure, charming genius when it comes to biochemistry and genetics – specifically, marijuana and its potential to make the world a more joyful place, but he still has a lot to learn about fatherhood, guilt, women, happiness and himself, and very little time to learn it in. Sonny has already lost one daughter and will lose the other unless he can win her back – and do it before he literally loses his mind. With the Feds about to shut down his Stateside marijuana farm and laboratory, Sonny finds himself in Jamaica working for a self-proclaimed Rastafarian Deity whose wife has overdosed on the very hybrid plant Sonny and his daughter, Summer, are struggling to perfect as a cure for what has become a world epidemic: Bipolar Disorder.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Wordless Wednesday: #2 on Amazon in Family Saga

Here’s a behind the scenes look at the process of finalizing a book’s cover design. These below are the various potential designs we looked at before developing the final one for my latest release. This week, Love Comes Later, is now #2 on Amazon’s list of family sagas, #14 in contemporary romance, and #51 in overall free books on Kindle. Yes, it’s FREE to download for 24 hours so check out why readers are giving it 5 stars and saying they can’t put it down

 

Compare and contrast and let me know what you think… do you like one of these or prefer the published version?

Draft covers for Love Comes Later

 

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