Once upon a time, I would have behaved like most other
authors and frowned on someone jumping from genre to genre. I would have
believed the hype that it could damage my career. I was told by many that an
author should be known and branded by only one type of book.
authors and frowned on someone jumping from genre to genre. I would have
believed the hype that it could damage my career. I was told by many that an
author should be known and branded by only one type of book.
Hooie!!
What makes you think if you have a receptive and
following audience in paranormal romances, that your writing won’t be just as good
and your voice be just as strong when you delve into a romantic suspense or… even a children’s book? LOL
following audience in paranormal romances, that your writing won’t be just as good
and your voice be just as strong when you delve into a romantic suspense or… even a children’s book? LOL
I know that many authors in the past would change
their names to write different genres because they believed their fans would riot
if they bought a book thinking it to be one of their historicals and it
turned out to be a suspense or contemporary. I’m thinking of women like Nora Roberts who uses
J.D. Robb for her suspense series or futuristic author Jayne Castle who writes
historicals under Amanda Quick and mysteries under Jayne Anne Krentz. Of
course, these ladies have a NY publishing house behind their best-selling
careers and therefore they don’t have to try and keep up a social media
presence for three different brands.
their names to write different genres because they believed their fans would riot
if they bought a book thinking it to be one of their historicals and it
turned out to be a suspense or contemporary. I’m thinking of women like Nora Roberts who uses
J.D. Robb for her suspense series or futuristic author Jayne Castle who writes
historicals under Amanda Quick and mysteries under Jayne Anne Krentz. Of
course, these ladies have a NY publishing house behind their best-selling
careers and therefore they don’t have to try and keep up a social media
presence for three different brands.
Today, it’s different. Today we respect the reader to
such an extent that we know she/he checks to see that the book they are about
to buy is the one they’ll want to read. And for those that make an error – on
Amazon (don’t know about the others since I’m only with Amazon) – a purchaser
can return an item once they’ve realized their mistake.
such an extent that we know she/he checks to see that the book they are about
to buy is the one they’ll want to read. And for those that make an error – on
Amazon (don’t know about the others since I’m only with Amazon) – a purchaser
can return an item once they’ve realized their mistake.
So, my advice to others is what I do myself. I try
very hard to keep my covers and my titles a depiction of the inside story so that people who
want to buy one of my books knows it’s a Vicarage Bench spirit-travel tale just
by looking at the covers. Same with the Angel series and of course, the Vegas
series can be nothing else but suspense since almost all the books show a cop
on the cover.
very hard to keep my covers and my titles a depiction of the inside story so that people who
want to buy one of my books knows it’s a Vicarage Bench spirit-travel tale just
by looking at the covers. Same with the Angel series and of course, the Vegas
series can be nothing else but suspense since almost all the books show a cop
on the cover.
A short sentence on the cover can also help the reader in knowing
the type of book they’re perusing. Heck, if all else fails the book description
must be full of the story details leaving no one wondering what genre this story
would fall into.
the type of book they’re perusing. Heck, if all else fails the book description
must be full of the story details leaving no one wondering what genre this story
would fall into.
There is one type of book I might be tempted to
start writing under a psuedenom especially if my other books are sweet romance
and I know you’ve guessed what that might be. But there’s certainly no law that
says it’s a must. I know quite a few very good authors who use one name and
they haven’t suffered by doing so. Today’s business has opened that particular
stuffy door and the fresh air in here is lovely!
start writing under a psuedenom especially if my other books are sweet romance
and I know you’ve guessed what that might be. But there’s certainly no law that
says it’s a must. I know quite a few very good authors who use one name and
they haven’t suffered by doing so. Today’s business has opened that particular
stuffy door and the fresh air in here is lovely!
In fact, this new world of publishing is making me
so happy that I’ve decided to revise an old contemporary romance written years
ago and it will be released next month. Lord I love this business!!
so happy that I’ve decided to revise an old contemporary romance written years
ago and it will be released next month. Lord I love this business!!
So – does this make sense to you? Or do you think we should still be sticking to only ONE genre?
In today's confusing world of digital publishing, it's probably a good idea to keep jumping genres until you find one that attracts an audience. A writer's mysteries may fall flat, but his her her Sci-Fi might generate a lot of book buyers. It is a trial and error world.
Hi Mimi, I think you're doing a great job with your cover to convey which genre your books are in.
I agree with Caleb, try different genres and see how things go. In any case, write what you're interested in reading and like minded readers will connect with you.
Beside, your writing name is your brand, and who knows? readers of your romantic suspense may enjoy your paranormal romances too.
Hi Mimi,
I don't think authors have to stick with one genre. I have favorite authors who have written in several genres under the same name, and I was so glad I found their other work. ie. Carrie Vaughn, who switched publishers in order to publish a variety of work under her own name.
Rachelle Gardner wrote a really cool article on whether we actually need all the pseudonyms
http://www.booksandsuch.biz/blog/rethink-pseudonyms/
I sometimes wonder how to handle kid's books though – I wonder if a kid might accidentally pick up one of the author's other books that are too old for them.
Hi, Mimi,
You noted how you use your covers to identify the kind of book you're putting out and I think that works.
My kidlit books are unmistakable in that I use headshots of kids so you know right up front what you're getting.
These comments warm my heart. I'm glad to see we're in agreement that the readers today are much more savvy than to make many mistakes.
It's kinda strange in a way because when I love a person's writing, I grab everything she/he/s written and mixing genres doesn't bother me at all. If the story is well done – I'm satisfied.