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Genre as a marketing category!
Publishers and editors do not think about genre the same way authors do. Here's an explanation.
... Now I write an ode to spinach:
Publishers and editors do not think about genre the same way authors do. Here's an explanation.
... Now I write an ode to spinach:
spinach,
you
are green
and
i wish i had more
of you than
what I ate
(yum yum yum)
at five in the morning,
dawn
creeping
up
you are
(my sunshine and)
the perfect delivery method
for salt and
garlic.
Re: Urban Fantasy//Dark Fantasy/Paranormal
Date: 2006-03-17 09:47 pm (UTC)There were two things I learned: one, if your summary/teaser can identify sub-genres--gay Japanese DEA agent, multicultural, queer, urban, check, check, check; has car chases, thriller, check--there's no need to identify any but the biggest: fantasy. Just slap the biggest on there and let the agent and/or editor whittle it down to proper categories. Identifying the rest is just treating the agent/editor like s/he's stupid: in case you MISSED the __ __ __ points in the teaser, I'm going to remind you: western urban SF thriller chick lit, damn it!
And the second thing I learned was that first novels pretty much, for the most part, suck. All the fancy adjectives and qualifiers don't mean jack if the story don't sing.