avatarRené Junge

Summary

The article emphasizes the importance of writers and their work on rainy days when people seek entertainment and distraction indoors, leading to increased book sales and readership.

Abstract

The author, René Junge, reflects on the significance of writing and its impact on days when the weather keeps people indoors. Highlighting a recent rainy Sunday in Germany, Junge notes a surge in book sales and read pages on Amazon, suggesting that bad weather correlates with increased consumption of written content. While global platforms like Medium may not be as affected by local weather conditions, book sales often depend on national markets where writers can observe a direct link between poor weather and higher engagement with their work. The article underscores the role of writers as providers of entertainment and escape, bringing joy and alleviating boredom on days when outdoor activities are limited. Junge takes pride in the knowledge that writers' efforts, often solitary and unnoticed, come to fruition on such days, providing comfort to readers and earning them new audiences.

Opinions

  • Writing is considered an essential profession as it provides comfort and entertainment to people on rainy days.
  • The author believes that writers contribute significantly to society by creating content that helps people cope with boredom when they can't engage in outdoor activities.
  • There is a pattern observed by the author where bad weather leads to increased book sales and readership, particularly in national markets.
  • The article suggests that while writing can be a solitary endeavor, it is rewarding to know that the work brings happiness to readers.
  • The author expresses satisfaction in the anti-cyclical nature of writing, where the hard work during sunny days pays off when the weather turns bad and people seek indoor entertainment.
  • Writers are seen as entertainers who offer an escape into other worlds, making their profession both meaningful and enjoyable.

We’re Writers. We Light Up Rainy Days.

Your friends and family may find that writing books or blogging are not essential professions. But we know better because on rainy days we see that people need us.

Photo by Muhammad Haikal Sjukri on Unsplash

Yesterday was a perfect day for authors in Germany. Not only was it Sunday, but we also had terrible weather.

I had so many sales and read pages at Amazon, as I haven’t had in a long time. I bet if you look at your statistics, you will see a similar pattern. On Medium, it might not matter so much, because here we write for a worldwide audience. If it’s bad weather at home, it can be sunny in the rest of the world.

But when you publish books, you are usually writing for a national market. At this level, you can tell when the weather is getting worse.

If people can’t go outside because of storms and rain, they have to do something else. Many then surf the Internet and may come across one of your articles. Others browse Amazon or the other retailers for books they don’t know yet.

Suddenly we authors are important to people. What would they read if we didn’t exist? I don’t expect gratitude, but it makes me feel good. Knowing that we are creating something that helps people on rainy days against their boredom is very satisfying.

On rainy days, we bring in the harvest. On the sunny days when the others were lying on the beach, we sweated in front of our computers and wrote the stories that people want to read today.

The Iceman earns almost no money today. Today is our day. Our book sales, reads, and views are increasing, and additional money is being washed into our cash registers.

We are producers who work anti-cyclically. While nobody reads, we write, and when everyone wants to read, we can sit back and welcome new readers.

Whenever I have a hard time writing and would rather be outside enjoying the sun, I imagine someone sitting on the couch reading one of my books on a rainy day, wrapped in a blanket. We writers are entertainers. We make sure that people can immerse themselves in other worlds for a few minutes or hours and forget their worries.

There is simply no better job. We may not notice it while typing our stories lonely on the keyboard, but we make a difference.

The world needs novelists, essayists, poets, and bloggers. Without us, the world would be harder to bear some days.

René Junge a published author writing on ILLUMINATION.

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