I've been reading this thread with interest but haven't said much...mostly because I am still not sure how I feel about this.
The short answer is yes, I have. But not very often.
A more accurate answer would be to say that finding an author very unpleasant in some form or other wouldn't ordinarily turn me off his books
entirely, but it would and has left an unpleasant taste in my mouth, if you know what I mean.
I am thinking not so much of the authors I've interacted with here but of others from other genres. For example, I went through a period that lasted a couple of years where I was interested in reading biographies or autobiographies of authors. I had to give it up because I found a pretty high percentage that just were NOT good people. They were, far too often, jerks - smugly misogynistic or virulently racist or completely selfish. People I did not want to know EVER.
Which shouldn't be too surprising, I guess, but still...you read these books, and the author sounds wise or warm or filled with knowledge of human nature or whatever, and it's kind of a shock to discover that you can indeed write wise, warm books that tell readers a lot about human nature while being, at least at times, a cold-hearted jerk. I realize that when you come right down to it, few of us could withstand intense public scruntiny, but I like to think that not everybody would come off as a cold-hearted jerk.
I got over most of the distaste generated by my biography phase. Eventually. I never have felt entirely the same about Tennessee Williams after reading his autobiography and experiencing a growing sense of absolute and total dislike for the man (I don't know if he wanted to sound like a whiny, self-centered egoist who cares about nobody but his own precious self, but if so, he succeeded), but I was eventually able to enjoy his plays again...so long as I don't let myself think about what a JERK he sounded like in his autobiography.
It probably helps - and I mean this sincerely - that most of the authors I referenced above are dead. Really. I mean, they were what they were, but they're gone now, so at least they can't add to their list of faults, wrongs and sins, and besides, if they're dead, I have no reason to feel as though in buying their books, I'm supporting somebody I dislike.
There have been times, though, when an author's actions have made me decide, at least for a time, to not give that author any of my hard-earned money. As others have pointed out, disagreeing with me is fine, and I can be and ought to be tolerant of disagreement. But there are people I am simply not willing to support by buying their books. Not many, but some.
A couple of recent examples of Authors Behaving Badly have left a bad taste that I still haven't gotten over. For example, I never have gotten over my distaste for Mitch Albom (if he has any big fans here, I'm sorry - he's a fine writer, but...) after a journalism scandal. That scandal didn't get a huge amount of media play, but as a former reporter, I keep up on media issues, and as the situation progressed, Albom acted and talked and wrote like someone who thought the ordinary rules of journalistic ethics didn't apply to him because he's just
so important and busy and talented.
And he was wrong. They do apply, and he had violated them, and he had done so rather flagrantly, too. So I am not going to give him any of my money, at least not for a while.
And I hope Jayson Blair has turned over a new leaf, but until I'm sure of it (and until he writes something that I have some interest in, which he hasn't thus far), I have no interest in giving him money either.
Of course, in both these cases, the unsavory actions involved their
writing, not their politics and personal lives. Maybe that makes a difference? I mean, nobody with any sense of reality could believe a word that Jayson Blair wrote, right?
While I admire those of you who believe the only thing that matters is what the author writes, not the kind of person he is...well, you know, I have to question that. It's all well and good to say "I don't care about somebody's politics." But if he's, say, a pedophile or a white supremist or something really unsavory...I have to think that some of you would find yourselves saying, "OK, that's enough. That's where I draw the line." I, for example, am far more likely to buy a book by Jayson Blair than I am that of a unrepentant pedophile.
But it does take more than a difference of opinion. I mean, as far as I am concerned, Tennessee, Mitch and Jayson can vote for whoever they like and that wouldn't bother me.
