Forum Transcripts

Genre Confusion

Event start time:

Sun Sep 17 14:01:01 2006

Event end time:

Tue Sep 19 13:36:43 2006



Legend:
Questions from the Audience are presented in red.
Answers by the Speaker are in black.
The Moderator's comments are in blue.

mary rosenblum

Hello all!

mary rosenblum

Happy fall to you, and welcome to our Tuesday Forum

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

I wanted to talk about genres today, because that confuses a lot of novice writers, whether they're writing novel lenght or short form.

mary rosenblum

And actually, it is a fuzzy designation. :-)

mary rosenblum

Genre is more to benefit the bookstore owners and market people than anything.

mary rosenblum

But it does matter and it does help to understand how it works and what it means.

mary rosenblum

Genre is a label that tells readers and bookstore owners...this book is more like this than something else.

mary rosenblum

The broadest genres are mainstream, literary, mystery, SF, fantasy, horror (which are grouped together sometimes as 'speculative fiction'),

mary rosenblum

romance, thriller...

mary rosenblum

I think I've got all the main ones.

mary rosenblum

They get further subdivided into a host of 'sub genres'...

mary rosenblum

mystery and romance have a LOT of sub genres...

geezer

Christian

mary rosenblum

Thanks Geeze. I knew I was leaving something out. :-)

mary rosenblum

And that also has a host of sub genres. Since you have Christian plus all the other genres...Christian romance, Christian mystery...etc.

lear4752

Are short stories a genre unto themselves, or do they just fit into the others?

mary rosenblum

No, lear, short stories just mean 'short'.

mary rosenblum

They fall into all the same genres as novel length works.

janecj333

Is commercial the same as mainstream?

mary rosenblum

Commercial is a fuzzy term that generally is used as a synonym for 'genre' meaning 'not literary'.

mary rosenblum

You will often see authors divide fiction up into 'literary' and 'genre'...meaning literary and mainstream versus everything else.

mary rosenblum

As with many terms in the writing world, they tend to have a wide range of meaning, rather than one precise definition.

megger

Do history and biography mainly fit under mainstream or literary, or does that depend?

mary rosenblum

Biography is considered nonfiction, megger. Unless you fictionalize it...then it's biographical fiction.

mary rosenblum

That and historical fiction tend to be subgenres of mainstream, unless you really alter the history or biography and then you end up as 'alternative history' and find yourself in the 'speculative fiction' realm.

mary rosenblum

Confused yet? :-)

mary rosenblum

That's why I'm doing this Forum.

mary rosenblum

It really can be confusing when you're trying to decide just where to send that novel or story!

heal

Where does personal essay fit in

mary rosenblum

That's nonfiction, heal.

mary rosenblum

I'm talking strictly fiction here, today.

mary rosenblum

Personal essay, or personal narrative is considered 'creative nonfiction'.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

onepozy

Define literary

heal

Define what they mean by literary

mary rosenblum

Ah, that's always a toughie. Again, no precise definition exists, but I have been talkign with a number of writers...

mary rosenblum

about where the boundary between 'mainstream' and 'literary' lies...

mary rosenblum

and our main agreement seems to be that in 'literary' form is as important as what you are writing about.

mary rosenblum

It is...in my opinion...more toward the poetry end of the writing spectrum...

mary rosenblum

in that the words you chose, the way you use form and rhythm, and language matters as much if not more...

mary rosenblum

than the story itself or the characterization.

mary rosenblum

That's why it's very important to read an issue or two of the many fiction journals out there that call themselve literary/mainstream...

mary rosenblum

so that you get a feel for what that editor is looking for.

mary rosenblum

YOu won't find dramatic arc in a lot of literary fiction.

mary rosenblum

You won't find the conventions of plot/conflict/characterization.

mary rosenblum

This is probably the broadest and blurriest segment of 'genre'...and it very much depends on what a particular editor wants.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

Short fiction is a lovely place to play with genre.

mary rosenblum

If you write a story that 'falls between the cracks' -- in other words, it fits more than one genre -- you can try it...

mary rosenblum

with various magazines or e-markets and see which genre it ends up in.

mary rosenblum

If it doesn't sell, it's no big deal.

onepozy

So mainstream would be stories that do not fit mystery, SF, romance etc.

mary rosenblum

Exactly, pozy.

mary rosenblum

If it's not mystery/sf/romance etc..it's mainstream.

mary rosenblum

Now...that said...

mary rosenblum

you have some 'mainstream' books like Handmaid's Tale, for example, that fit quite nicely into another genre...

mary rosenblum

speculative fiction in that case...

mary rosenblum

but they have been marketed as 'mainstream' because the mainstream audience is the second largest reading audience out there...I think it's still not quite as large as romance but I could be wrong....

mary rosenblum

It's a LOT larger than the speculative fiction audience, that's for sure.

mary rosenblum

So those 'genre' labels are very mutable, depending on what the marketing department chooses to do.

geezer

So if we have no dramatic arc, we can cal it literary? :-)"

mary rosenblum

Well, I wouldn't say that a lack of dramatic arc makes your story literary, geeze. :-) That's hardly the only criteria. But many if not most literary stories...

mary rosenblum

do lack a clear dramatic arc.

janecj333

Can you explain magic realism...I'm thinking of The Milagro Beanfield War.

mary rosenblum

That's another 'eye of the beholder' label.

mary rosenblum

The original Magic Realism included a small cadre of South American writers writing in the fifties (I think fifites...).

mary rosenblum

It has since broadened to include stories and novels that contain fantastic elements that derive from the culture and people in the story...

mary rosenblum

rather than from external sources...ie fairies, a Harry Potter 'world of magic'.

mary rosenblum

It is a VERY fuzzy boundary.

mary rosenblum

I have sold mainstream stories to 'magic realism' anthologies. I have sold fantasy stories to 'magic realism' antholgies.

mary rosenblum

I have sold magic realism stories to mainstream and fantasy anthologies. :-)

mary rosenblum

One person's mainstream story is another person's magic realism, and another person's fantasy.

mary rosenblum

But essentially, the magic arises from the real world, not from a separate fantasy universe.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

kems

would a novel with the age of the characters being around 18 and 19, entering college be considered YA or regular adult fiction? It's chick lit.

mary rosenblum

You've answered your own questions, kems.

mary rosenblum

Chick lit is a separate genre these days.

mary rosenblum

It has grown out of the romance and the women's fiction (mainstream) markets and sort of merged.

mary rosenblum

And this is the only...the ONLY reason genre matters...

mary rosenblum

it matters because it helps you find a publisher who is likely to publish this story or book.

mary rosenblum

Genre is more than just 'idea'.

mary rosenblum

Yes, if it has rocket ships in it, it's probably SF. (not always).

mary rosenblum

And if it has fairies in it, it's probably fantasy...a murder, it may well be mystery...a ghost, it might be horror.

kems

I was wondering if I should make my characters older, maybe enter teachers college or something. But okay. Looks like my original will work. Thanks.

mary rosenblum

Go for chick lit, kems. It's a growing market. But I would sure read some of it before you decide.

mary rosenblum

This is the issue...

mary rosenblum

that genre includes 'reader expectation', and 'reader acceptance'.

mary rosenblum

People who read in a genre READ in it.

mary rosenblum

They read a lot of stuff in it.

mary rosenblum

They pick up a sense of how things go, they get tired of certain plot cliches...

mary rosenblum

and if you 'walk into' a genre that you don't read in and try to write a novel in it...or a short story for that matter...

mary rosenblum

you are likely to make 'mistakes'.

lear4752

Is there a "most popular" genre, one that tends to sell the best or have the most volume? If so, I would assume it is realistic fiction?

mary rosenblum

It's romance, lear.

mary rosenblum

That is the biggest seller and the authors that make the most money per book are Romance authors.

kems

This is my favourite genre to read. My idea seems fresh but I wasn't sure if the age would be too young for others to be interested.

mary rosenblum

If you read it, you're probalby fine. But the readers of chick lit are from ninth grade or younger through whenever. :-)

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

writermom

so what is it if you are combining a murder mystery and some historical fiction in a contemporary setting

mary rosenblum

This is where you have to do some reasearch, writer.

mary rosenblum

It may fit the historical fiction markets. Mystery plots work quite nicely in all genres. I have yet to write a SF novel where at least a few reviewers didn't use the word 'mystery' to describe the plot. LOL

mary rosenblum

Doesn't hurt me at all. :-)

mary rosenblum

But if it's predominantly mystery in 'form', you might sell it to a mystery publisher rather than a historical fiction publisher.

lear4752

Very interesting ... romance isn't the answer I would have guessed! It seems so "not literate", but then again it tells us a lot about our society (and I don't mean that necessarily in a bad way, just as commentary)

mary rosenblum

Oh, literary fiction is outsold by mainstream thrillers, too, lear. :-)

janecj333

Some romance authors are writing a book a month...it's hard to believe they can make much per book for such throwaway literature

mary rosenblum

Well, it's cheap and easy to badmouth romance. You have a wide range of quality in what is available in fiction...in all the genres.

mary rosenblum

You have books that are very thin in plot and what I would call 'poorly written', but they sell well enough to make the company money.

mary rosenblum

The writers who are writing three category romances a year...or military SF thrillers, or what have you...

mary rosenblum

are not making big money at all. :-) Nora Robers, IS.

dim writer

What genre is Nora Roberts?

mary rosenblum

Romance. She earns more than Stephen King.

tarsus

Would a talking dog and a Bigfoot creature fall into the speculative fiction genre? They only have one paragraph at the end; rest of the story is about an elderly man wondering what's in the woods behind his house.

mary rosenblum

It entirely depends on the rest of your book, tarsus. They would fit fine into a mainstream book. :-)

mary rosenblum

Again, this is why 'genre' is such a slippery and confusing concept for new writers.

mary rosenblum

The answer to most questions is a frustrating 'maybe'. :-)

gwanny

Mary how much of the genre slotting has to do with writer style?

mary rosenblum

A lot, gwanny.

mary rosenblum

The biggest style boundary lies between literary and everything else.

mary rosenblum

If you write something with a very traditional genre plot...say mystery or romance...and you use a literary style...

mary rosenblum

you may have trouble selling it. Your style may not appeal to the traditional romance reader...

mary rosenblum

and your romance dramatic arc may not appeal to the literary reader.

janecj333

Well, I guess I could badmouth erotica, too...

mary rosenblum

Even there you run the gamut from stuff I call porn to some very elegant literary fiction.

mary rosenblum

The best student I've ever had writes breathtaking literary erotica.

gwanny

It seems that we are borrowing the styles of the authors we most enjoy reading. And that this is why we read what we long to write.

mary rosenblum

Or vice versa...you write what you read, the way you'd like to read it. :-)

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

And that is my strongest strongest piece of advice for novice writers.

mary rosenblum

If you are writing short fiction, play around. Try everything. Short fiction is a much more eclectic playground than the novel arena.

mary rosenblum

But if you're contemplating a first novel, by all means, write in the genre you read in.

builder guy

Is the children's book genre a lucrative one?

mary rosenblum

Childrens literature covers as many genres as adult literature, builder...

mary rosenblum

even more, probably, because you have various age levels.

mary rosenblum

How much you earn there depends entirely on what you write and who publishes it.

mary rosenblum

If you are trying to decide where to publish your book...

mary rosenblum

the only way to know which publisher publishes that type of book is to put in some homework time in the bookstore.

mary rosenblum

Don't use the library, because publishers keep changing what they do.

mary rosenblum

The imprint that published cozy mysteries two years ago may now be publishing hardboiled only.

kems

I have an idea for a non-fiction self-help book. Do you happen to know what the average word count is for this category?

mary rosenblum

The nonfiction book market is its own world, kems.

mary rosenblum

You can find out easily enough.

mary rosenblum

Head the the bookstore, hit the 'self help' section with a tape recorder or notepad...

mary rosenblum

and start browsing. Write down publisher name and page length.

mary rosenblum

Usually, when you look up a publisher in the writers market lists, the will tell you what lenght they want specifically.

mary rosenblum

And it varies widely...

mary rosenblum

from 40,000 words to over 100,000 words.

mary rosenblum

Don't START with the market lists.

mary rosenblum

All the guidelines sound alike.

mary rosenblum

Start with the bookstore.

mary rosenblum

Look for books sort of like yours.

mary rosenblum

Write down the publisher name...it's non the spine and the inside page.

mary rosenblum

Then look up the details of what that publisher wants in terms of word count, agented or non, etc.

cj001

How is the success rate of self-publishers, even by genre?

mary rosenblum

Self publishing means you pay to publish your book cj.

mary rosenblum

YOu won't sell many copies.

mary rosenblum

If you just want your book published, go for it.

mary rosenblum

If you want a

mary rosenblum

career in that type of fiction, it is...right now...not a good way to start.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

You need to define your goals for yourself. What IS your main goal?

mary rosenblum

To have a book available on Amazon.com? Easy. iUniverse will do a nice job for you for about 300

mary rosenblum

But no, that's not a direct route to big sales or reviews in your local paper.

mary rosenblum

But if you have a strong niche market and you plan to do a lot of promotion and advertising, you can make probably as much money as you might have made from a small advance. It'll just take you work to get that niche market to know about your book.

mary rosenblum

Of course you might spend as much as you make on that advertising. :-)

mary rosenblum

The big mistake I see among novice writers where genre is concerned...

mary rosenblum

are the writers who decide to write for a genre because they think there's money in it.

mary rosenblum

Thrillers are big sellers. They tend to earn large advances from the mainstream thriller publishers, and a lot of novice writers start there, even if they've never read thrillers.

mary rosenblum

And thrillers have a pretty consistent style and form.

mary rosenblum

If your thriller doesn't fit that style and form, that's going to count against it when the editor or agent looks at it...

mary rosenblum

and unless it is strong enough to outweigh that marketing 'negative', you're in trouble.

mary rosenblum

Now you CAN sell something that is not 'traditional', but it has to be strong enough that the editor will fight the (highly coservative)...

mary rosenblum

marketing people for it. :-)

mary rosenblum

If you read thrillers all the time, you know how a thriller 'feels' and even if you can't tell someone exactly what 'makes it' a thriller...

mary rosenblum

you'll know when your story 'feels right'.

mary rosenblum

As you become more skilled at novel writing and more aware of technique, you CAN analyze what makes a thriller a thriller.

mary rosenblum

Many professional fiction writers write for multiple genres.

mary rosenblum

But even if you read, say, in mystery...

mary rosenblum

you still need to do a bit of research when you sit down to write that mystery.

mary rosenblum

IN this genre, the boundaries between the subgenres are pretty distinct.

mary rosenblum

Same with romance.

mary rosenblum

It's not so true in SF and fantasy.

mary rosenblum

You don't have distince sub genres, although various publishers will tend to prefer certain types of SF or fantasy...

mary rosenblum

space opera or sword and sorcery or urban noir

writermom

I find that all my story ideas don't fall into one genre so I have a couple different novels going in different genres

mary rosenblum

Nothing wrong with that, writer. :-) I do two genres.

mary rosenblum

And more than that in short fiction.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about genres today. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

Now I am not telling you that you should try to write to a formula in order to sell your novel.

mary rosenblum

Except in a limited number of category romance lines where they DO want very formulaic books...

mary rosenblum

the publishing industry is a frustrating mix of wanting the 'safe and same' and at the same time wanting 'new and exciting'.

mary rosenblum

Your best bet always...yes, here's one of those very few 'always' I'll admit to...is to write what move you.

mary rosenblum

Don't worry about where it will fit or how to make it fit a particular genre.

mary rosenblum

What sells a first novel is the passion that rises from the pages and grabs the editor (and readers) by the throat.

mary rosenblum

You need to feel that passion before you can get it into the page.

mary rosenblum

So write what you care about. Write it as strongly as you can write it.

mary rosenblum

Then. When you're done, figure out where to try and sell it.

silkybutterfly12

I notice that the last few forums have been geared toward novels is there others for short stories or can we use the info with shorts as well?

mary rosenblum

It's exactly the same for shorts, silky.

mary rosenblum

I've been mentioning novels specifically, because until we started offering the novel course, I tended to focus pretty exclusively on short form.

mary rosenblum

Ot

mary rosenblum

It's easier to cross genre in short fiction...the short fiction editors tend to be more willing to take risks with stories...

mary rosenblum

because they have less expense riding on it.

mary rosenblum

If readers don't like this story, well the magazine offers other stories.

andi

when can anyone sign up for the novel course, Mary?

mary rosenblum

I don't know, andi. LR is developing an admissions test, I know.

mary rosenblum

Every writer I know, says the same thing at every workshop, class, or what have you.

mary rosenblum

Write what moves YOU.

mary rosenblum

Then figure out where to sell it.

mary rosenblum

That is the best and surest way to break into publishing, whether you write short fiction or novel.

mary rosenblum

And do check out the publishers.

mary rosenblum

As you know, the market lists are full of magazines that publish 'fiction'...

mary rosenblum

and they don't really qualify that.

mary rosenblum

One editor's idea of 'good fiction' is going to be very different than another editor's idea of 'good fiction'.

mary rosenblum

Face it. Rejection slips hurt. The editor rarely writes back to say, 'this is a very powerful and well written story, but I just don't publish this type of story''.

mary rosenblum

No, the editor generally sends you a preprinted rejection and it is DARN hard, especially when you are starting out...

mary rosenblum

to avoid feeling that your story was 'bad'.

mary rosenblum

And it might actually be very saleable. It's just that this particular editor doens' like this particular type of story.

mary rosenblum

There is NO absolute standard for 'good fiction'.

janecj333

I'd rather have the king hire me as a bard...at least it would be a steady, if modest, pocket o' gold

mary rosenblum

Hey, where are patrons when you need 'em? I always wanted one of those!!!

mary rosenblum

Even though it costs you some cash out of pocket...

mary rosenblum

my suggestion to you is to do some publisher homework.

mary rosenblum

if you're writing short fiction, send away for a sample issue or two and read 'em.

mary rosenblum

Get a feel for what that editor wants and likes.

mary rosenblum

Yes, it's an investment.

mary rosenblum

But isn't an acceptance worth some investment? EVery time you sell a story it makes it easier to sell the next one. :-)

mary rosenblum

If you have finished a novel, take some time to evaluate your book. How would you describe it?

mary rosenblum

Now head for the bookstore and start browsing the shelves. Read the jacket blurbs.

mary rosenblum

When you find a book that's sort of similar, write down that publisher.

tarsus

After receiving how many form rejections should you consider revising your story? How do you even know if you shold revise it?

mary rosenblum

YOu don't know, tarsus.

mary rosenblum

If it's as good as you can do, if your readers haven't found consistent flaws in it, then I wouldn't revise it.

mary rosenblum

You don't know why it was rejected.

mary rosenblum

When you have tried it with all the markets you can find, file it.

mary rosenblum

New markets open up all the time. Anthologies open up all the time. It's nice to have something in inventory when you find a new market.

mary rosenblum

Take it out then, polish it if it needs it, and send it out.

beryl

My novel is about a widow's re-entering life with a dash of romance and mystery, I'm throwing my hat in the mainstream pool, sounc right?

mary rosenblum

Probably Beryl. You've mentioned this a couple of times and to me it sounds as if it's less about The Romance and more about her, so that would probably take...

mary rosenblum

you into women's fiction (a sub genre of mainstream).

mary rosenblum

Oh yes...

mary rosenblum

do realize that if you browse only the big chains, such as Waldens, B & N, Crowne, you will miss the small press publishers.

mary rosenblum

You have to check the independent bookstores for them. Not many of them distribute widely to the chains.

mary rosenblum

Some do. Many do not.

mary rosenblum

Don't overlook them in the market lists, even if you haven't seen their imprint on the Barnes and Noble shelves.

beryl

thanks, "hen lit" oh, my

mary rosenblum

LOL...that does seem to be trying to turn into a sub genre. I'm not sure it's quite the same as the much broader 'women's fiction' though

janecj333

I know you have good feelings about Fairwood Press as a small press pub of sf. No matter how much reading I do in market lists and on-line, it's impossible to tell if a small press is worth approaching. Do you recommend any others?

mary rosenblum

YOu can check out a small press publisher in a couple of ways. One is to ask the owner of an independent bookstore about that publisher.

mary rosenblum

They'll usually offer an opinion of the quality of the output. I'd ask more than one bookstore owner...

mary rosenblum

because opinions ARE opinions.

mary rosenblum

The other way is to notice whether that press has had any award winners.

mary rosenblum

Not Pulitzers necessarily...but every genre offers a range of literary awards.

mary rosenblum

A publisher whose books do win the occasional award is not only selecting quality rather than producing quantity, but he/she is bringing those books...

mary rosenblum

to the attention of award committees. So that pubisher cares about what is published, isn't just making money by selling four copies of a legion...

mary rosenblum

of poorly written cheaply published books.

mary rosenblum

Eos is good, Jane. Nightshade books is really up and coming.

mary rosenblum

I'd subscribe to the SFWA Bulletin and read it.

mary rosenblum

or even more effective...

mary rosenblum

subscribe to Locus for a year and read it.

mary rosenblum

They publish all the books accepted and published by all the SF publishers, big and small.

mary rosenblum

They do not list the quantity and vanity press publishers.

silkybutterfly12

I know when I go to a book store I tend to check out the

silkybutterfly12

authers I know so how do you get readers to look at yours if

silkybutterfly12

new to the scene

mary rosenblum

That's always the dilemma when you're new. There are SO many new books...how do you attract readers.

mary rosenblum

You do it several ways.

mary rosenblum

A really eye-catching cover helps.

mary rosenblum

Often you have no say over that, but if you do, work at it. :-)

mary rosenblum

A catchy title can help.

mary rosenblum

Blurbs by well known writers on the cover will help.

mary rosenblum

If readers like that writer and she/he says this book is great, they may pick it up.

mary rosenblum

PR helps.

mary rosenblum

Try to get your book reviewed, be on panels at workshops or conferences, never say no to anyone who asks you to come talk.

mary rosenblum

Word of mouth is your most powerful sales tool.

mary rosenblum

If readers love your book, they tell their friends. That can be a geometric progression and it gets you a LOT of readers.

mary rosenblum

If you publish with a NY house they'll do some of that. But the more you do the better.

mary rosenblum

Well, this has been a fun Oregon hour. :-)

mary rosenblum

I'll post the transcripts of this in the usual place...

mary rosenblum

Writing Craft: Forum transcripts.

mary rosenblum

Genre can seem intimidating, but don't let it be.

mary rosenblum

It's a marketing definition.

mary rosenblum

Write what you love. That's rule number one!

mary rosenblum

See you tomorrow, for our casual chat!

 

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