She
emails me and says:
I
love you. I love that your books aren't anything. [This novel] is like urban
and traditional fantasy had a baby.
It’s a
funny message to get from your agent – one that makes you laugh even as your
heart clutches at the confirmation that, yes, this is yet another hopelessly
cross-genre novel.
I did
warn her. I met her at RWA after she read Rogue’s
Pawn and loved it. I told her it took me years to sell that book, because
it was neither fantasy nor romance, an urban fantasy, kinda, that takes place
in a non-urban landscape. So, I wrote her back and told her I know I’m
hopeless, that I don’t try to be this way. She responded with strategy to sell
it to the perfect editor.
Which
is why I signed with her. At least she gets me.
And
then I commiserated via IM with one of my critique partners, who is also
hopelessly cross-genre and she wondered what is wrong with us, that we write
this way. Why we just can’t help ourselves. Why we can’t just color inside the
lines for once.
Which
made me remember back when I was six years old. We had a special art project to
paint acrylic flowers and then go over the painting with black marker, making
big, swooping outlines around the petals and leaves. It was supposed to be kind
of abstract and free (this was the early 70s, after all).
I painted
my flowers, bright orange petals circling a yellow center. The image is still
strong in my mind, those colors so vivid and perfect. Those paints had an
intensity I hadn’t encountered before. But, when it came to it, I couldn’t
disrupt that lovely color with big, careless loops. Instead I outlined each
petal with a precise black line.
The
teacher gave me a C, for not following instructions. And the painting won the
grand prize in my school art show. My mother had it hanging up for a long time,
too, in a lime green frame that matched my carefully outlined leaves and stems.
I
suppose the moral here is obvious. As much as I would enjoy getting an A+ from
those editors who pay the big bucks, those bestseller list nods, there’s
something in me that values the story more. Ultimately, I make that choice to
honor the story and characters over the genre rules. It might feel to me that
it needs to be that way—just as those
orange flowers needed to be that way—but I’m still making that choice.
At
least my agent loves me.
BIO:
Jeffe Kennedy is an award-winning author with a writing
career that spans decades. Her works include non-fiction, poetry, short fiction,
and novels. She has been a Ucross Foundation Fellow, received the Wyoming Arts
Council Fellowship for Poetry, and was awarded a Frank Nelson Doubleday
Memorial Award. Her essays have appeared in many publications, including
Redbook. Her fantasy BDSM romance, Petals and Thorns, originally published
under the pen name Jennifer Paris, has won several reader awards. Sapphire, the first book in Facets of Passion has placed first in
multiple romance contests.
Her most recent works include three fiction series: the
fantasy romance novels of A Covenant of
Thorns, the contemporary BDSM novellas of the Facets of Passion, and the post-apocalyptic vampire erotica of the Blood Currency.
An avid user of social media, Jeffe engages daily with thousands
of fans on Twitter, Facebook, and Goodreads.
She frequently guests on publishers’ Twitter-feeds and reviewers’ blogs.
She’s been an active member of RWA since 2008. She served two terms as
president of RWA’s very large Fantasy, Futuristic and Paranormal
special-interest chapter and continues as an advisor to the current board.
Jeffe can be found online at her website: JeffeKennedy.com
or every Sunday at the popular Word Whores blog.
27 comments:
I'd read it. ^_^
Sometimes it's less comfortable outside the box than inside it, isn't it? I think that's why cats like boxes. They're trying to tell us our lives would be easier if we could just curl up in cardboard, too.
Too bad I'm metaphorically allergic to cardboard. But hey, maybe with the rise of the e-book, we'll find there's a place for us after all... Good luck, and keep writing for the story!
This post comforts me and make me sad. I'm one of those cross-genre (many, MANY genres) writers and I want to wait for that agent and editor who will love my book like I do, but it's so hard. When you hear "the writing is great, the characterization, the world building, the dialogue..." and on and on, but no one is willing to take a chance, it's a bit daunting.
But, I'm not ready to give up hope and you and your excellent writing are an inspiration, Jeffe.
Thanks for this.
Thanks Juturna! Love the cat-in-box analogy. It *does* look so cozy...
Don't give up, Pamala! We shall overwhelm them with our cross-genre army of DOOM!!
Yay for honoring the stories! I think that's some of best writing a writer can do...thanks for a thought-provoking post!
@SpiceBites
Thanks Rashda!I agree that it's the best writing a writer can do - even if the marketers don't always agree.
I love the cross-genre stories that pop into my head. They're they only kind I seem to generate. And I love that some agents and publishers are willing to take a chance on them. It's not an easy way to have a writing career, but I wouldn't want you or any of us to give it up.
"...but one said there was too much romance in his fantasy and the other said there was too much fantasy in her romance."
I had the same issue. I was fortunate that my agent finally succeeded in selling the books, but I wouldn't change what I write to make a better fit somewhere...
Perhaps our middle-of-the-road stories will take off and spawn a whole new sub-genre ;o)
Me too, Cathy!
I hope so, J - I think it's starting to happen!
Ya know,they keep asking for something fresh and different but what they really want is something the same, just a bit different. I'm sure a lot of people do like to read in their boxes, I don't and my friends don't so, whaddya do? I guess just keep writing
So true, Mona - if only we had a nickel for every time we heard that one!
Wonderful! I can't imagine trying to SELL the Big 6 (5?) with a story your agent cannot even pigeon-hole. Keep on truckin'.
Anything that's like urban fantasy and traditional fantasy had a baby sounds like something I'd buy. Keep writing the cross-genre, Jeffe.
Clearly this is why she's a good agent for me, Nancy - she believes!
Many kisses, B.E. You're the best!
To me, this illustrates why it's important to write what you love. If you love your world and your characters and your genre-bending story, then readers will love them, too! Glad your agent gets it! She sounds wonderful.
Loving this post, Jeffe!! Cross genre lives! Maybe not in the mainstream but a babbling brook that's all orange and green.
Bravo, Jeffe!! Here's to always writing the story true to your heart. :-)
Good point, Paula! And my agent is really lovely - I'm happy to be with someone who isn't trying to change what I write.
Love that image, CC! Nothing wrong with an orange and green babbling brook, nuh uh!
Thanks Maeve!
Oh man, I can't tell you how much I needed this post right now, Jeffe. I just got a long letter back from an editor at one of the big 6. He said my writing is fantastic, but my fantasy novel has too much sci-fi. A few weeks ago, I got a great critique from another big 6 editor that judged my contest entry. She loved my writing, but my sci-fi novel had too much fantasy.
I've been tearing my hair out debating how to rewrite the plot to remove either the futuristic stuff from my mythology or the other way around. Another writer friend talked me off the ledge but I was still a little shaky.
Your post has convinced me to stick to the story and the characters that speak to me. Thanks!
I feel your pain, Asa Maria! It's not the easiest path maybe but, for some of us, it seems to be what we *have* to do. Good luck! (And consider Carina Press) :D
Thanks, Jeffe. I'll definitely check out Carina.
Jeffe I hear this from so many authors. And as Mona said editors sat they want something new and fresh…until they get it. My plan is to write what I love. I’m not trying to jam my stories into any pigeon hole. Period.
I think we have to write what we love, Rita - and hope the pigeon holes come to us!
I loved your post, Jeffe. My very first manuscript started off as a fantasy set on another planet where the towns were primitive and people rode horses. When people told me it read like a western, I rewrote it as a western but kept the aliens. It never sold--it was too much fantasy, too hard to shelve, etc. After all, who writes westerns with alien warriors? That was way before Firefly and Cowboys and Aliens. I felt so vindicated when those shows came out. Having an agent who believes in your voice is an amazing gift!
You're right, Alexis - I'm very lucky to have her. And I love the sound of that story. You did Cowboys and Aliens first, dammit!
An excellent post!
It should always be about the story and characters!
Your word are inspiring.
Great post Jeffe!!! :)
As another cross-genre writer, I totally understand!!!
I'm so glad you found an agent who embraces your unique story-telling... It's a gift to have a different voice in the ocean of fiction...
*HUGS*
Lisa :)
Thanks Annie and Lisa!
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