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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.
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:07 pm (UTC)Checkmark! Gold Star! Yay, Anna!
p.s. in case you missed it, CKR 'caps in my journals.
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:14 pm (UTC)And you are all reading an absolutely kick-ass book. (With a kick-ass sequel that should not be read first, because it will spoil the first one!)
I keep trying to review it and flailing because I feel like I can't do it justice. Nevertheless: kick-ass novel that is *truly* Austen-meets-noir, with all the implications thereof there on the page.
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:Hunter's Moon
Date: 2006-03-17 07:32 pm (UTC)When I read it, I loved it too. It's the story of a man named Tony who is a Mafia assassin. He's been turned into a werewolf. He's lost track of the days. It's the full moon. There's a woman, there's a lot of money, and there's a lot of gunfire.
I have to disagree with you on this. I read "Hunter's Moon" and would only give it a C or average score. The main reason is that it was way too schizo for me. It's all over the place. First, it's about a woman who wants to be assasinated. Then, there's a romance. Then, the Mob gets involved. And oh yeah, the hero's a werewolf too. It's a mish-mash of everything.
I love books that mix genres (Jim Butcher's "Harry Dresden" series is a great example). But I thought "Hunter's Moon" was trying to be everything to everybody. One of the subplots needed to be taken out.
Re: Hunter's Moon
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:33 pm (UTC)Thanks again!
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:36 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:37 pm (UTC)I feel strange admitting this, since it's such a subtle, nebulous thing, but the friend who told me I should read Point of Honour just said, "It's a Regency mystery." So I wasn't expecting the alternate history element, and it threw me out of the story, because I'd been looking forward to a mystery set either in the author's best approximation of the actual historical period, or else the consensus frothy alterna-Regency many romances are set in. I need to go back and try it again, because I could tell it was well-written--it just wasn't what I was expecting to read.
Which I guess just goes to show genre is all about expectations--if I'd known going in that I was reading a genre-bender instead of a straightforward historical mystery, I'd have responded differently to the book. And that's probably a cautionary tale for an aspiring genre-bender like me (I'm somewhere on the border between historical romance, historical fiction, and the military historical).
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From:so i am a wimp...
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-17 07:39 pm (UTC)you stick
in my teeth
on March 17
all I need
is a drink
Nice post again.
Happy St. Patrick's Day. :-)
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:41 pm (UTC)So when is The Robot Cheerleader Wars by Samantha Carter coming out?
*runs away to hide*
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From:Thank you again!
Date: 2006-03-17 07:45 pm (UTC)This was pretty enlightening, and I already feel like I have a better grasp.
Re: Thank you again!
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-17 07:46 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-03-17 07:46 pm (UTC)Genre is always an interesting study. I enjoyed the fact that China Mieville referred to his writing as "new weird". I'd love to see a section called that in a bookstore!
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From:confusing
Date: 2006-03-17 08:01 pm (UTC)So I pitch it as a SF Romance now (which everyone is interested in - so yeah!), but I still always think of it as hard sci-fi, I almost feel like I'm perpetrating a fraud.
I keep wondering if SF readers will be more tolerant of the sex (yeah, romance, whatever...) or if Romance readers will be more tolerant of the science...
Would you ever *leave out* genre info, (in talking about a book) just because you think it will confuse the issue?
Thanks!
JD
PS - Spinach, yum...
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From:Urban Fantasy//Dark Fantasy/Paranormal
Date: 2006-03-17 08:23 pm (UTC)Re: Urban Fantasy//Dark Fantasy/Paranormal
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From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2006-03-17 09:25 pm (UTC) - ExpandRe: Urban Fantasy//Dark Fantasy/Paranormal
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Date: 2006-03-17 08:38 pm (UTC)I will say that when I turned the book in to
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From:genre
Date: 2006-03-17 08:40 pm (UTC)Re: genre
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From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2006-03-17 09:24 pm (UTC) - ExpandRe: genre
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Date: 2006-03-17 08:48 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-03-17 09:09 pm (UTC)Your posts should be required reading for _ALL_ writers. "Introduction to writing 101 - the ALG method"
Thanks again and again and again for your tireless effort at making all of us writers a little less ignorant and, dare I say it, a little more empathetic.
Peace
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From:Outline - Questions
Date: 2006-03-17 11:27 pm (UTC)OK. You've got the main "gist" of the story set in a specific type of genre.
You give a multi (sub) classification of some genres (examples: romance/fantasy/paranormal or thriller/sci-fi, etc.)
How much harder is it to sell the multiple (sub) classification compared just making it one genre?
For example: (Publisher = Editor/Agent/Person in position of selling or marketing and buying.)
Publisher: You have a story for me?
Author: Sure do.
Publisher: What genre is it?
Author: Well glad you asked. It is a combination of Thriller/Fantasy/Romance/Science Fiction.
Publisher: Excuse me? Sounds too complicated.
Author: Well it's a story of a Dragon Egg that is teleported into the future where there is no magic. Yet, the Dragon that is born from the egg has magic. The Dragon befriends a human cop and helps the cop solve crimes (in the future) and the cop meets a lady... who the dragon uses a little bit of magic to make them fall in love.
Publisher: Wow, well that sounds like a great story - but I can only sell Romance novels. (*Insert any genre here*)
Author: Well it does fit that genre.
Publisher: Not really. It's a tad of all of those and I just don't think I can sell it because it doesn't fit one stereotype of any of them.
Author: But it's a great story?
Publisher: Yeah. I just don't have a place to put it though.
So Anna, what if the story really crosses all the boundaries equally?
Will the "Publisher" try to round peg it into a square hole to make it more marketable?
Or will they have the Author try to narrow it down to one specific genre in order to sell it?
I realize a lot of the industry is only driven by the top dollar... so does that mean genre is a big issue on top dollar sales to the customer - or is it a little more flexible than what I'm imagining?
Lady M
Re: Outline - Questions
From:Re: Outline - Questions
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-18 01:01 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-03-18 01:04 am (UTC)Well, that sort of depends, I think of how much of the roundness needs to be trimmed to fit. But remember that marketing is the key--where in the bookstore it's shelved will determine your readers. I've recently taught several classes on the romance subgenres (some of the most confusing), but I always try to tell students that in the real world of the bookstore, the subgenre is only important to the AUTHOR and to the PUBLISHER. The bookstore will shelve it in romance. Period. It's alphabetical. Sherrilyn Kenyon (paranormal) is next to Tori Carrington (contemporary/category) is next to Carla Neggers (romantic suspense). It doesn't matter. It also doesn't matter if Jim Butcher is "alternate reality" or "urban fantasy" or "paranormal". He's shelved in Science Fiction/Fantasy.
And THAT'S what's important to the aspiring writer. The publisher only has X number of lines available and you have to fit the book into one of them. So selecting the publisher becomes the product of what YOU call the book.
So, you call it: Thriller/Fantasy/Romance/Science Fiction
Let's trim that down a little. It has thrilling ELEMENTS. It has romance INSIDE. But you EITHER have a Fantasy OR Science Fiction. Not both. Fantasy requires world-building and magic. If you have both of those, such as LKH does, or Mercedes Lackey, there's your genre. Fantasy is a "master" genre that overcomes the rest. You either have a fantasy with romantic elements or a fantasy romance. Being shelved in romance requires that it have an HEA (Happily Ever After). Science fiction is kicked out because SCIENCE should be the key to the story, rather than magic. If I had this story, I'd either sell to a romance publisher and tell them it was a fantasy romance, or a fantasy publisher and tell them it has a thread of romance. JMHO, of course. Fortunately, Tor has lines for both... ;-)
I actually find selecting the genre really easy, now that I've been studying others on the shelf. :)
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Date: 2006-03-18 02:24 am (UTC)Having posted it here.
Having realized that I posted it with out spell-checking it (Oh! The horror!)
Having promptly deleted that message in chagrin, there not apparently being any way to edit it.
Having then remembered that alg would probably get an email notice containing said message anyway, that she might even try to reply, that she might then be frustrated and annoyed by the fact that the orginal no longer exists...
Um, oops...
Sorry!
I guess I'm more used to using web-boards than I am to lj comment threading.
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Date: 2006-03-18 03:42 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-03-18 03:58 am (UTC)http://www.livejournal.com/userinfo.bml?user=miss_snark_feed
Perhaps useful, perhaps not ;}
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From:Me Again Marge... *ps don't use caption html - it whacks it outta shape*
Date: 2006-03-18 08:09 am (UTC)(So Anna, I can't answer the why questions unless I want to get really silly. I will, if it'll make your teeth feel any better. I like folks to laugh. But if that won't work - Me passes You a bottle of percocets and a cup of coffee.)
But this Comment:
The most common response to an editor or agent saying, "Your book is actually about X," is the author immediately saying, "No, it's not, you just don't understand!"
In that case, the author needs to (a) take a step back and learn some manners, and (b) rethink the way s/he is presenting the book. If an editor doesn't "understand" what the book is about well enough to judge its genre, based on the author's description, that is not a failure on the editor's part.
Does that make sense?
OK - That makes sense.
Do editors and authors usually work well together? Or are there usually a lot of primadonnas on either side?
Do the agents work more as middleman between the author and editor - or does it depend entirely on the agent/editor relationship? Or is it usually editor/author only?
In my opinion an editor should be able to request whatever they want... They are the ones ordering the item. *Like ordering at a nice restaurant... You want what you want - not what the chef looks at you and decides that you want.* They are the ones who will make it or break it - and the writer is but the best chef presenting what they hope will be a very tasty morsel.
Immediately apologizes for asking the flurry of questions - goes back to corner and whimpers... :P
Huntergal - I thank you way much. Very way much. (Alaskan lingo). That was extremely helpful and it boiled it down easily to one thinkable line for me:
where in the bookstore it's shelved will determine your readers
Rock on!
You guys are very helpful and thank you for your patience with me. I'm a very curious person --- you know... the ADHD kid in the back of the class that always has her hand raised - with the big glasses and seriously off the wall questions, that probably only make sense to her... :P
Re: Me Again Marge... *ps don't use caption html - it whacks it outta shape*
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