Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

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Steve Laube also remarked in his post that Christian publishing hasn't produced any noteworthy "breakout books" in a long time. And I quote: "(I define “breakout” as a title that rises to the top of the bestseller’s list and stays there for a long time, selling millions of copies.)" For me, the reason for this declaration falls squarely on the broad shoulders of the Christian publishing industry – all of it. 

When I think of "breakout" novels in fiction, I think of This Present Darkness by Frank Peretti and Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers. Both of these are timeless novels, each unique and well written, still selling, and still discussed. Both bold and controversial in their own right but beloved by many and totally redemptive.

But, although it might be all about producing a breakout novel to the publisher(s), to the "ambiguous average" reader it's about producing good books – and that is subjective beyond description.

When you ask a random reader how they define Christian fiction, the words that generally get tossed around are "religious", "poorly written" (which is a joke considering a lot of the writing in the popular and bestselling secular/general market novels), even "judgmental". When you ask a random Christian reader to define Christian fiction, you usually get responses such as "God-centered", "clean" – often meaning no "bad" words or graphic sexual scenes – "redemptive" whether overtly or subtly. 

Regardless of definitions and breakout novels, the economy did tank for the past eight years. It's making a remarkable comeback at the present time. However, during those hard years, many publishers pulled back and went into their "safe" mode. To an observer it felt like they went back to what they knew much of their familiar, faithful audience liked to read and figured if those readers would just purchase the same kind of fiction they'd been reading for years, the publishers would ride the slow wave until they could hopefully find a way to see a rising tide and maybe expand their menu. In the process they alienated many potential audiences who hungered for that deeper selection. By alienating a significant audience, their future success in reaching new or adventurous readers was jeopardized.

One of the alienations occurred when a portion of readers blanched at the inclusion of certain words which they loudly claimed were inappropriate for Christian readers and therefore writers (i.e. hell, damn, crap, boobs). Their vocal demands, accusations, and threats to publishers curtailed some realistic language spoken by characters in a limited capacity in the genre. The demands by publishing houses in the requirements for being selected for their houses stayed stringent and eliminated some authors from attempting to inquire. Once again, this isn't to say those words are necessary to present realistic drama in a story, but neither are they so utterly offensive or sinful to require being totally eliminated. The same complaints came from any romantic scene which implied sexual desire even in romance novels. Or where the physical appearance of a character became the subject of admiration. An example of this was a 70 year old female character in a bestselling Christian romance gushed over the attractiveness of a young, handsome male character. An Amazon reviewer was offended that a woman of her age rattled on about this hunk. Now that review offended me

Well, writers don't necessarily quit writing during a tanking economy, and readers never quit reading. When all of the e-readers became commonplace, and the cost of reading a full length novel for much less became practical, the popularity of the instruments boomed. Along with that trend, writers decided all those novels they'd written could be formatted electronically, their covers independently consigned, personal editors hired, and suddenly they could publish their own books! The kind of books they liked to read would be available because they would write and produce them! And for those who are/were less, or not at all, techy there were self publishers waiting for the opportunities to serve them for much less than it cost to do a soft cover copy. Indie publishing zoomed into the forefront of Christian e-books. And the prices were right because they were usually much cheaper than the e-novels from traditional publishers – with greater royalties for their authors than provided by traditional publishers – and suddenly the plethora of e-books presented readers with unlimited selections in all kinds of genres.

There were notable trends during this malaise in Christian publishing. At the time, Amish fiction and historical romances loaded the shelves of Christian bookstores. However, during that same time in the general market, fantasy novels were blowing off the shelves. Christian publishing houses insisted that "their" audience wouldn't buy Christian fantasy so very few were produced. As a side note, during this time I attended a Christian writers' conference where almost 90% of the attendees and aspiring authors wrote and read fantasy. This disinterest in fantasy/sci-fi by most Christian publishers did produce a couple of offshoots from professionals within the industry who tried diligently to produce those kinds of novels exclusively.

It seems possible to me from conversations I've had with some professionals that once settled into the routine of publishing and selling, a separation can occur between the publishers, the booksellers, and their consumers: the readers. Since there are innumerable types of readers with an endless variety of tastes in fiction, it's important to maintain a working relationship with the audience being served. If a publisher assumes a certain audience will always be there, that their desires will remain stagnant, they could forfeit an entire new avenue and possibly lose some of those they've counted on to stay the same.

I've said it before multiple times and I'll add it again here. Any business, Christian publishing, retail, or otherwise, can choose to conduct their businesses however they desire, to cater to a specific audience, to add or subtract from their author stables, their products, and/or employees. Their successes and failures rest with their decisions, right and wrong.

Another noteworthy item that bears mentioning is the mistake-laden production of books in the last several years. Errors have been plentiful in both physical books and e-readers and were surprising at first but now have become commonplace. A missing letter, a wrong reference to a character, a misspelling, incorrect punctuation . . . and this isn't particular to any division of publishing. It's happening in both general market and Christian publishing. Usually attributed to cutting costs in copy-editing, its reoccurring consistency seems a strange choice for professionals.

Finally, the ongoing mystery of how to successfully market fiction remains. It's not difficult to market the bestselling authors whose names are immediately recognized and whose new releases are welcomed in the pre-order offers. But, and it's a big "but", to market a new author, to expect any unknown author to do a spectacular job of selling his/her novel, this creates a significant problem. More of this job has fallen in the laps of writers with multiple and multi-faceted suggestions/demands from the publisher. Unfairly, I might add, because the publishers falter at it regularly and expecting an author to produce the knowhow is presumptuous and ripe for failure. Some are good at it, but many are not. Besides, it's a mystery how to approach selling each book.

I realize this is a long mishmash of thoughts regarding publishing, the Christian Fiction genre, and, honestly, I don't intend to tie them all together to make a convenient end to this post. However, I welcome any comments you'd like to offer or discuss.  

 

Father, you know the answers to all the questions. You know the questions before they're asked. You are the advocate of every believer, and we're desperate for you in all we do. Thank you for always being with us even when we choose the wrong way. Help us to remain obedient and eliminate those wrong turns. In the Name of Jesus, Amen. 

 

 

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7 responses to “Knockdown . . .”

  1. Sally Bradley Avatar

    Nicole, you have a lot of good things to say. I especially agree with what you said about the publishing community choosing “safe” books when the economy crashed. I was one of those realistic fiction writers (clean but with real issues–my first book being a story about an unchurched, kept woman who would have been a die-hard 50 Shades of Gray fan and what it took for her to hunger for God and completely upend her life for Him). A top-notch agent loved my writing, said I very well could become a big name in the industry, but she wasn’t comfortable with my story. She wasn’t comfortable with the topic. Did I have anything else?
    Take that same book almost 3 years later after I indie pubbed it, and a California church book club of 125-150 readers chose it for their very unique, very fun summer book club. And one of the first questions a reader asked when I Skyped with them was, “We had such a hard time getting print copies of your book. Would you consider publishing this through publishers?”
    When I told them there had been little interests from publishers, jaws dropped in the room. I could see about 30 to 40 people–they were stunned. And these were not 20 or 30-somethings, although there were a handful in there. This was the morning book club so it was mostly woman 50 and up. They had completely not expected that answer!
    Maybe sales of safe fiction went really well for publishers in the next few years. That could very well be the case,and there is a need for safe fiction. I wouldn’t have any real idea of their numbers, but as our culture becomes more and more out there, I do believe there is a need for a lot of fiction that addresses that from a Christian worldview. Doesn’t have to be preachy. Doesn’t have to have a conversion. Doesn’t need to have verses included! It can just be Christian characters living life. But I think it’s needed. And I do feel like I’m starting to see more of it coming from trad publishers. Which makes me happy. I just say, Keep it coming. Do more. Give it oxygen, and that spark will take off.

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  2. Sally Bradley Avatar

    As I’m reading over my comment, I guess I need to add that publishers may be getting frustrated with this topic since it does look like they’re acquiring more realistic Christian fiction. But it takes time, sometimes a good 2 years, before that change hits shelves. I think part of it is that they have to go back to what used to be the norm, really investing in building an author’s readership. Understanding that unless they’ve written the next Redeeming Love, it will take time for them to be discovered. I would love to hear that all publishers are doing that.

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  3. Nicole Petrino-Salter Avatar

    I thought you chose a meaningful topic in Kept with a thoroughly thoughtful approach. (I need to read it – only have seen part of it. I apologize for that, Sally.) And I’m not surprised that the Book Club was surprised (aka appalled) that publishers passed on your book.
    I knew early on I would have a hard time with CBA publishers – one of the simpler matters being the length of my novels (100,000K+ word counts), the other being the realistic description(s) of worldly characters/situations.
    And I do see some change infiltrating a publishing house here and there, but I know for a fact it’s going to take a lot of time and effort, as you said, to regain some readers and start a new collection of readers and that’s if they’re able to do it at all now with indie publishing flourishing.
    If all they wanted/needed to consider their businesses successful is/was to maintain safe/clean books for their portion of readers, they have those in spades. Just keep mass producing those chaste romances, those romantic suspense novels, those historical, Amish, historical romances, etc. by some good authors, some very good authors, and some able authors to fill this considerably large portion of Christian fiction readers. But it certainly doesn’t address another large portion of readers such as the ladies in the Book Club who devoured your book.
    Some publishers try/tried a separate imprint for the different approaches to their fiction. Since I don’t still see some of those, I assume they weren’t successful.
    Honestly – and I don’t mean to be as flippant as this is going to sound – I really don’t care if publishers/agents/professionals in the biz might be getting “frustrated” with this topic. As the old cliché goes, they made this bed. They chose safe fiction over other well-written authors who stretched the genre formulas to write provocative and meaningful fiction for a wider audience than some of their readers. And quite frankly, those safe novels produced or enhanced some self-righteous, legalistic, and demanding readers with sharply critical voices. As a result, they lost some excellent authors to the general market publishers and now to indie publishing.
    Thank you, Sally, for contributing your thoughts on this subject. I truly appreciate your personal experience and knowledge on this.

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  4. Brenda S. Anderson Avatar

    I’ll add to your mishmash of topics, Nicole! Yesterday I went to the closest Christian bookstore to me, a Lifeway that’s about 30 minutes from home. The last time I was in the store, it had 10+ shelving units with fiction titles. Yesterday, it had 2! Two! The music shelves had been gutted as well.
    I asked a worker about it and she said that they cleared out the old titles and just carry the new. This store never carried old titles, especially 8 shelves of them. I have no reason to ever go to their store anymore. Our local B&N carries more Christian fiction!
    I don’t know what this says about Christian fiction. Maybe it’s just showing that all of us who claimed CF would die if they didn’t start offering more genres to choose from, that we were right.

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  5. Nicole Petrino-Salter Avatar

    Wow! Two! Shelves! Just carrying the “new” titles would comprise more than two shelves, for crying out loud! I bet you felt like you’d wasted time and money to go there. That’s pathetic.
    E-readers have hurt the bookstores but not necessarily because of the convenience of ordering books online with only seconds to wait for the new cheaper “book” because almost all the real readers I know prefer a “real” book in hand, including myself. However, spending outrageously for them is not a plus as many as I and many other readers read.
    I think from corporate to the publishing industry day-to-day employees are to blame. Like we’ve discussed here, the freedom of choosing literature is much expanded by the indie publications for less in both print and electronic books. The industry has priced itself out of competition and shut itself out from a large and growing audience of readers by what they offer and what they’ve refused to offer. IF it’s their funeral, it will be a sad day for all of us who write Christian fiction regardless of people like me who’ve never been traditionally published but who have faithfully read Christian fiction.

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  6. Brenda S. Anderson Avatar

    Well, not 2 shelves, but 2 shelf units, so probably 10 shelves altogether. But still, it use to have 10 shelving units.
    Seeing that, I’m very grateful for the growth of indies. At least with them, we get variety rather than the limited choices of trad pub.

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  7. Nicole Petrino-Salter Avatar

    I knew what you meant, Bren. Still, that’s nothing compared to whole store sections dedicated to Christian fiction. It’s a shame really, but clearly they (the stores) must be basing their demises on the decline of Christian fiction. They’re missing the real reasons.

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