Totally agree — it's fascinating how the idea of the "author" has evolved into more of a brand in many cases. With names like Tom Clancy or James Patterson, it feels less like you're buying a book by a person and more like you're buying into a particular formula or universe that carries their name. It’s a whole publishing machine.Tom Clancy is like that too. Seems there is at least a new book every year even though he has been dead since 2013. Of course, he allegedly used ghostwriters when he was alive and his name is just a brand by now, but come on. Same for James Patterson (still alive though).
The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan was finished by Brandon Sanderson after Jordan's death etc.
There's been J.R.R. Tolkien books published fairly recently! (Dead since 1973.) And while I don't know what I believe, Christopher Tolkien could have made these up all by himself. Who the hell is going to know how finished these supposedly "found manuscripts" actually were?
And going further back, Dumas used ghostwriters extensively, and while extremely talented, he was also like a popular brand author at the time. The Count of Monte Cristo is believed to be written by Dumas himself, but the plot outline is by Auguste Maquet.
It's not a new thing. And it's not going to disappear anytime soon.
Read The Tusks of Exctinction (2024) by Ray Nayler.
Science fiction thriller about mammoths brought back from the dead - led by the human consciousness of a 100-year dead elephant expert transferred into a mammoth-brain... Decent read.
I find this idea disturbing to the extreme.Read The Tusks of Exctinction (2024) by Ray Nayler.
Science fiction thriller about mammoths brought back from the dead - led by the human consciousness of a 100-year dead elephant expert transferred into a mammoth-brain...
I mean, mammoths brought back is bad enough, but the elephant expert part gave me nightmares last night.I find this idea disturbing to the extreme.