Friday, April 29, 2011

Battle of the Sexes

Here's an interesting, just-for-fun website that determines whether your blog/website is written by a man or a woman: Gender Analyzer.

Spire Reviews comes out with a 55% guess that it's written by a woman. In other words, this site is gender neutral. Since I target both the male and female audience, I think that bodes well for Spire Reviews.

I also entered my website, Brenda Anderson Books, and it registers a 54% guess that it's written by a female. Again, I find this encouraging in that I hope what I write will cross gender borders.

When you put your site through the Gender Analyzer, what does it come up with? Are you happy with the results?

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Pet Peeves in Fiction

As readers, we realize that what individuals love or hate in fiction is subjective. I may roll my eyes at a particular plot device, while the reader next to me may love it. I'm not talking about the "rules" of writing, but rather those elements in a story that bug us for various reasons.

Here are some of my main grievances:

The Princess Bride movie references. Once upon a time I loved that movie. It was quirky and fun with understated intelligence. But then it seemed every other book I read quoted, "Inconceivable!" or "As you wish." or some other TPB reference. Isn't it time to move on to something new? Please?

Bullet Point Prose. Here's a quick example: "She typed words on the keyboard. Read them. Erased them. Typed them again." Isn't that the same as this?
  • She typed words on the keyboard.
  • Read them.
  • Erased them.
  • Typed them again.
Yawn. When I read a book, I don't want to read an outline. I'm looking for prose with a flowing cadence, not a jolting stop. Yet I'm seeing this more and more in fiction, especially since writers are consistently being required to trim words. Sure, I can see this technique used in fast-paced thriller scenes, but I'm seeing it everywhere. As a reader it nearly always stops me, and I have to re-read the sentences. I'm just guessing that's not the author's intention ...

Modelesque/Hollywood-type Protagonists. I know, we all like to watch "beautiful" people. Our movies and books are filled with them. But, a book that can use the ordinary and make them a thing of beauty is far more interesting. It's my opinion that if your characters are modelesque, there should be a purpose behind their extraordinary beauty. Just as setting plays an important role in literature, shouldn't character appearance also play a role? Would Jane Eyre have been the same if she had exquisite beauty? Two of my favorite series' have "plain" leads: Trixie Belden, and Hadassah in Francine Rivers' Mark of the Lion series. I've read two authors of late who have used the unconventional lead: Kaye Dacus and Sarah Sundin. Their books prove that the definition of beauty is far broader than a Hollywood description.

Romances where the male and female leads spend precious little page time together. If the book is a romance shouldn't the leads actually spend time with each other? Shouldn't we see them getting to know each other? Show them fight? Tease? Sure, conflict can and should keep them apart emotionally, but shouldn't the book show them interacting in the midst of the conflict? Isn't that how true love grows?

The No-Good, Cheating, Dead-Beat Ex-Husband. Pick out a handful of books classified as Women's Fiction and I'll bet half of them have a female lead who's overcoming her victim hood from her lousy ex-husband. (Or at least it seems half of them use this plot device.) The ex-husband is typically a very shallow, one-dimensional character, and the wife is merely a casualty of his selfishness. I honestly can't read any more fiction with this device. It's old and way overused. I know writers are more creative than that.

Whew. I feel better getting all that off my chest.

Now, here's your opportunity to vent your irritations. What are your pet peeves in literature? What elements of story do you see overused? Do you think I'm nuts? Do you love the very things I hate? I'd love to know. Remember, this isn't about what's technically correct; it's simply about your opinion.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Interesting Debut Author Stats

In case you're an aspiring author looking to break in, here are a few interesting statistics from the Debut Novel page.

(Please note: the list for 2011 is still incomplete as I only have books listed through September. The majority listed release by May.)

Total Books Listed: 32

Genre:
Amish - 2
Biblical Fiction - 2
Contemporary - 3
Historical Fiction - 11
Memoir - 1
Romantic Suspense - 3
Romance - 7
Speculative - 1
Young Adult - 2

Publisher:
Abingdon Press - 1
B&H Books - 2
Barbour Novella - 1
Barbour Publishing - 1
Barbour/Heartsong - 1
Bethany House - 2
Black Lyon Publishing - 1
Desert Breeze - 3
GES - 1
JourneyForth - 1
Love Inspired Historical - 1
OakTara - 1
Realms - 1
Revell - 1
SkySail Books - 1
Thomas Nelson - 5
Torn Veil - 1
Tyndale House - 2
Waterbrook Multnomah - 1
Whitaker House - 1
White Rose - 1
WhiteFire - 1
Zondervan - 1

It doesn't surprise me that Historical Fiction leads the way with eleven debut novels. Romance lags a bit behind with seven. Combine that with the three from romantic suspense and you have ten. I am rather surprised that Amish only has two.

It's also interesting to note that Thomas Nelson has five new authors while other major publishing houses only have one or two. A little over one-third of the books releasing this year come out under a small or lesser known publishing label.

Question: What is your take on these statistics? Does it give you hope? Does it point you in a different direction?