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Showing posts with label Trish Perry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trish Perry. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Change We DO Believe In







I use my blog,Reading, Writing, and the Stuff In-Between,” to interview Inspirational novelists and introduce their latest releases to my readers. As most interviewing bloggers do, I tend to use a set of questions that doesn’t vary significantly from author to author. The answers are what vary, since they reflect so many different viewpoints and experiences.

Still, each month I have a particular question just for that month’s authors. Sometimes I ask something very specific about their craft, sometimes about their joys or frustrations, sometimes about their readers. Not too long ago, I asked my featured novelists about the Inspirational publishing market. “What, if anything,” I asked, “would you change about the Inspirational fiction industry?” Maybe you’ll identify with some of their answers.

What would you change about the Inspirational Fiction Industry?


I think most novelists would just as soon write, write, write, and leave the promotional efforts to someone more talented in that department. Ronie Kendig, author of Digitalis (Barbour), says that, since the Inspirational market “ . . . is a dynamic, constantly changing industry, I don’t know that I’d change anything. Or perhaps I’d lift the burden of marketing from the author’s shoulders and return it to the marketing department. To me, this is like asking a dog owner to be able to perform surgery on his/her pet simply because it’s their pet.” I so agree. I’ve definitely seen my “pets” thrive more from the able efforts of my publishing houses’ marketing efforts than from anything I’ve been able to accomplish.

Part of the equation for the success of our novels includes shelf placement in bookstores. Mary Connealy, author of Sharpshooter in Petticoats (Barbour), says, “I love the Inspirational fiction industry. I think it’s the most exciting genre in fiction today, expanding in all directions, trying new things, reaching new audiences.” Still, she says, “I think my books are for everybody. I wish somehow I could get them in the general romance section and the Inspirational fiction section.


"That’s tricky.” Maureen Lang, author of Springtime of the Spirit (Tyndale), agrees. “I wish bookstores would place our books in the fiction section in their bookstores. If they’d like to set it apart as Inspirational fiction, that’s okay—I don’t want a reader to be surprised by Christian content, either. But so often Inspirational fiction is set far away from the rest of fiction, barely marked or under Religious sections without a clue to a browser that our books are even available. It’s so sad when I receive a note from a reader that starts out saying, ‘I had no idea there was such a thing as Inspirational fiction!’”

The higher-selling novelists in the Inspirational industry—those who have actually experienced placement on the famed bestseller lists—can have an unique take on how our books are presented to the buying public. New York Times bestselling novelist, Terri Blackstock, author of Vicious Cycle (Zondervan), says, “I wish there were more Christian stores that reported to the New York Times so that all of our fiction could compete with the best-selling secular books. In the past, none of our Christian book store sales were counted. To make the NYT list, you had to have stellar sales in the secular stores. But in the last few months, a couple of the Christian chains announced that they are going to be reporting their sales. That’s a major breakthrough, and it’s because the New York Times recognizes that Christian books are selling very well.”


That’s good news for all of us.

Still other authors focused their answers to my question on the content of the books themselves, and the restrictions novelists may experience in subject matter. Janelle Mowery, author of When All My Dreams Come True (Harvest House), says, “I’d like [Inspirational fiction] to be perceived as good entertainment rather than another means to preach. I’ve heard people say they avoid Inspirational fiction for that very reason.”


Gail Gaymer Martin, author of A Dad of His Own (Love Inspired), adds, “Although some publishers are becoming less conservative, I find that sometimes the stories I want to tell are bound by restrictions that don’t reflect real life. Christians are sinful and make mistakes. I want to write real and deal with characters who struggle with all of the life situations that so many of us face day to day. We can’t do this if we are restricted by too many rules.” In the short time I’ve been publishing, I can say I’ve experienced a bit more of what Martin craves. Just today one of my readers thanked me for using two divorced characters as my hero and heroine. I have my publisher to thank for allowing me to “get real” about an unfortunate but true sector of the reading public.

I ask all of my interviewees to imagine their novels in film version. When answering my question about the Inspirational novel industry Mary Ellis, author of Abigail’s New Hope (Harvest House), said, “I would encourage filmmakers to make more wholesome, family-oriented movies. Other than animated films, there are few good movies that aren’t loaded with violence, sex, and/or foul language.” Amen to that, Mary, and we Inspirational novelists could point the filmmakers to plenty of good material to choose from.

As Mary Connealy said, the Inspirational publishing industry is expanding and trying new ways to reach readers. Since every player in this particular market has the same ultimate goal, I like to think some of the above author suggestions might be given consideration. After all, if any wing of the publishing industry has a prayer of succeeding, ours does.


Unforgettable


Rachel Stanhope tries to see the good in everyone.


But Josh Reegan tests even her good graces when they meet outside her Arlington, Virginia, dance studio in 1951. He's attractive, yet his cynicism and cockiness are hard to tolerate.


A journalist and former World War II Air Force pilot, Josh considers ballroom dancing a frivolous waste of time. Although Rachel's confident nature is a refreshing challenge, he wouldn't tangle with her if his newspaper hadn't assigned him to cover her studio's competition in New York City.

Between the melodrama of ballroom antics and the real drama of political corruption, Rachel and Josh have their hands full. The last thing either of them expects is mutual need and support. But once they stop dancing around the truth, the results are unforgettable.

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

You May Be a Novelist ~ by guest blogger Trish Perry

Award-winning novelist Trish Perry has written eight inspirational romances for Harvest House Publishers, Summerside Press, and Barbour Publishing, as well as two devotionals for Summerside Press. She has served as a columnist and as a newsletter editor over the years, as well as a 1980s stockbroker and a board member of the Capital Christian Writers organization in Washington, D.C. She holds a degree in Psychology. Trish’s latest novel, Unforgettable, releases in March, and Tea for Two releases in April. She invites you to visit her website.

You May Be a Novelist

If you’re like most fiction writers, whether published or not, you’ve struggled with that decision about when to actually call yourself a novelist. Yes, once you land your first contract, it’s a given. But most of us toil for years before that happens. Are we presumptuous to call ourselves novelists, or even writers, right from the start?

You know the way it plays out. Someone asks what you do. You say, “I’m a writer!” And they ask . . .?

Right. They ask if you’ve published anything. And if you haven’t, there’s often that whiff of awkwardness in the air while you justify having claimed the title.

Personally, I hesitated to call myself a writer until I got my first novel contract, for exactly that reason. I hated the idea of sounding like one of those pitiable American Idol contestants who claims she’s a much-lauded singer back home right before she mangles the living daylights out of BeyoncĂ©’s latest hit.

But I feel differently now that I’ve been more active in the publishing world and have met some truly excellent, hard-working, persevering writers—yes, I call them writers—who simply haven’t clicked with a publisher yet. They’ve even completed one or more intriguing novels and are simply trying to find the right fit. So publication isn’t the only yardstick. I think there are other criteria that can qualify one as a novelist, published or not.

Certainly, one must actually be writing. There’s no getting around that. And for our purposes here on Novel Journey, it would make sense that you’re pursuing the completion of a novel. This is an important distinction, because the novelist is a far different breed from, say, the guy who writes about the life and times of Donald Trump, or about the latest jump in corn futures, or about how to rewire a chandelier.

Your typical novelist has quite different ideas banging around in her head. Ideas about love, danger, adventure, mystery, and life-altering journeys. And in the eyes of non-novelists—or, as best-selling author Brandilyn Collins calls them, “normals”—your average novelist often seems just one set of Vulcan ears away from being a total nerd.

Do you identify with any of the following behaviors? If so, you may be a novelist.

• At times I’m so absorbed in the “what if’s” of my plot that I lose all awareness of my real-life behavior. I’ll catch myself standing, like Boo Radley in drag, staring out my window at absolutely nothing for half an hour. Or worse, staring at my next-door neighbor who has apparently waved at me several times, receiving nothing but my glassy stare in return.

• My daughter, who is house hunting, tells me she doesn’t want a competing buyer to know she is interested in the same house he is. I gasp and say, “Smart! That’s exactly what happened to one of my characters! She showed an interest in a house, so the competing buyer offered full price, and she lost the house to him.” My daughter is a sweetheart (and knows me well). So her pause is barely discernable before she carries on, allowing me time to rejoin her in the real world.

• If I’m under a tight enough deadline and afterwards I get together with friends or family, I get a sore throat from talking. Why? Because it’s just been my characters and me for a while. And my characters and I can have entire conversations without my actually speaking out loud. In fact, if I’ve been speaking out loud to my characters, the oddness factor sharpens considerably. Especially if I’m staring out my window at my next-door neighbor while I speak.

• When I see a particularly odd-looking person in real life, I quickly whip out pen and paper from my purse and blatantly draw her so I can turn her into someone fictional.

• When I publicly embarrass myself in some way, I get over it by logging my faux pas away in my brain for a future hero or heroine to suffer. This makes me happy.

• Sometimes I think back on a hero and heroine from one of my past romance novels and wonder how their relationship is currently going.

• I’ve caught myself praying for my characters.

• I don’t write murder mysteries, but I know many such novelists, and they’re constantly thinking about how they would kill people they meet—in the grocery store, online, at church. Have I mentioned Brandilyn Collins?

• I’ve been right in the middle of writing a scene when a character says or does something I never planned. Sometimes it’s something that completely changes where I want to take the plot. I used to hear about such things and think the novelist was full of herself, trying to claim mysterious gifts only great literary geniuses possess. Now I know novelists are just weird.

You may read the above descriptions and shake your head at how silly they all sound. Or you may have nodded your head here and there, identifying fully with what I’ve described. You may have different, but equally odd, behaviors to share.

If so, published or not, you may be a novelist.

Whether you still want to claim the title is up to you.

NJ: Leave a comment for Trish and be entered in a drawing for Unforgettable.


Unforgettable

Rachel Stanhope tries to see the good in everyone. But even her good graces are challenged when she meets Josh Reegan outside her Arlington, Virginia dance studio on a brisk fall morning in 1951. Admittedly, he’s attractive, but she finds his cynicism and cockiness hard to tolerate.
A hard-news journalist and former World War II Air Force pilot, Josh considers distractions like ballroom dancing frivolous wastes of time. He has yet to shed his wartime drive to defend good against evil whenever he can. Yes, Rachel’s confident nature is a refreshing challenge, but he wouldn’t tangle with her if his newspaper hadn’t roped him into covering one of her studio’s competitions in New York City.

Between Arlington and New York, between the melodrama of ballroom antics and the real drama of political corruption, between family involvement and romantic entanglement, Rachel and Josh have their hands full. The last thing either of them expects is mutual need and support. But once they stop dancing around the truth, the results are unforgettable.