Well, I feel like you'd definitely have an audience out there.
'Not Fade Away'
The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Susan, I have nothing to offer on this one. I don't write genre fiction - I just write fiction. But then, I don't write epics, either - I'm into minimal language that's as powerful and that carries as much as I can make it. Which isn't a knock at the longer, fuller form - see Chabon, Michael, Kavalier and Klay. But even there, in my favourite book on earth, I'd have edited a good twenty pages (that's book pages, so way more inmanuscript terms) out of the Antarctica sequence. Personal taste. And as to the market, I'm clueless.
Susan, I feel like the question is, which is more imporatant to you? To make a living from your writing, or to write exactly the stories in your heart or whatever. If getting published is #1, you should probably focus on writing the kinds of things you know people want to buy.
I've heard it "it grieves me" all my life. What I've never heard before is "I grieve you."Me too deb, that's why I looked it up. I have also said and heard "They are grieving" (in lieu of 'mourning')--just never the way Liese used it.
I don't know, Jesse. I do want to sell, and I hope to one day be able to be a full-time author. But I'm starting to realize just how much I've been fighting my natural tendencies as a writer to try to make my books fit the romance industry's current requirements for length and plot. I'm not being a genre snob, mind--if I *could* write the kind of thing Jo Beverley and Loretta Chase are putting out, I would, and I'd be thrilled with my work. Or if the genre shifted a bit and made room for epics again, I'd be happy to sell accordingly. Meanwhile when I look at the market for what I actually want to write, it's smaller and more amorphous, and therefore harder to make that first sale. But if you *can* make that sale and find your market, it's a great place to be--I guarantee you Diana Gabaldon sells more copies of her books than even very successful historical romance writers.
So. Stuff to think about. Meanwhile I think I'm going to keep writing the way I want to write.
Run along. Nothing to see here.
1400 words of the prologue to WMGGW? Done.
Anyone wants it had better ping me. This list is going to be request only. I need to keep it reasonable.
I'm a little busy, Deb. I'll read the full draft when it's done, though.
Kewl.
Deb, insent.
I'd love to read your new one.
I'l give you feedback! I have feedback coming out of my bottom!