i'm angry at christopher paolini. he takes forever to come out with his books, while they are impressive, he hardly had to do any work to get them published because his dad funded it all. I'm also a talented writer and I'm sure I won't be able to get a single publishing company to take my work and Paolini is on easy street...and he doesn't even seem committed...
That's not entirely fair. Given the amount of history in his world, all the different character stories he has to wrap up with this last book, and all the questions he has to answer, he has a
[removed] ton of work to do. To say that he's not committed to this series after the numerous years he's spent on it is, frankly, insulting. I've spent six years on my own book series, with only one self published novel to show for it, and that's because the story is that involved. There is so much going on in my series that the reader will never see, but I still have to work out because it directly affects what the reader
does see. I imagine Christopher Paolini has a similar task on his plate.
And how much work does it really take to get published? It's not a lot of physical work, apart from mailing the book to agents for consideration. I know when I shopped my book to agents, I was pretty much universally greeted with "We like/love your material, but we have no idea how we'd sell it to a publisher". Paolini has been very fortunate in his journey, with his whole family supporting his efforts before he got his book deal. But to say that he was/is on easy street? Entirely unfair. If writing was an easy career to pursue, everyone would be doing it. Even though publishing contracts do come with big numbers occasionally, they also come with deadlines, and those are never easy to work under when your story is as complex as The Inheritance Cycle.
"he hardly had to do any work to get them published because his dad funded it all": So writing a 500 page novel, then revising it three to five times, is "hardly any work"?