- Joined
- Sep 25, 2021
As a woman, I hate how all we write is shitty YA and romance. All the modern authors I see are all overly liberal, too. That means more political correctness and less risk-taking in favor of not offending others. I'm working on my own stories, but they're not YA or Romance or shitty fantasy nor some shitty greek myth retelling so I'm starting to think it's over. And by marketing smut and YA to women, it feels like some sort of misogynistic bullshit, telling women we shouldn't be reading classics or something more mature.
Sigh.... Allow me to use this post as an example of Survivorship Bias with everyone's favorite plane picture
I have written thirty books. Only three of them were politically correct YA Romance/Shitty Fantasy. The rest were Hard SF and MilSF with the occasional contemporary horror.
I spent years trying to get published.
You'll only need one guess as to which three books survived the submission process and were picked up by a publisher. Now I'm a woman who writes shitty YA and romance.
As much as I would love to do otherwise, if my current more MilSF book gets knocked back by my agent/publisher for being a genre they can't sell I'm gonna have to do shitty YA and romance #4.
Not relevant to the actual conversation (about fun books for guys) but it tipped off one of my memories about the difficulties of submitting a book for agent representation and publication.I take you've never read Tom Clancy Red Storm Rising is a fucking gripping read.
Any book/author with an aim to be published worldwide and make any kind of cultural impact needs to approach the large publishers. Importantly part of the process is "comp" books - comparison titles published within the last 12-24 months that your hopeful book would fit next to on a bookshelf.
The problem is that a modern Red Storm Rising has no comparison book. There's nothing within 12-24 months published like it, and acquisitions meetings are notoriously bitchy. Smaller more niche publishers like Baen might, but they have really shitty distribution and come across as being very Small Time, and once you get caught in that ecosystem it can be hard to break out. Angry Robot "might" host it, but again as others have mentioned, publishing is so notoriously woke now, you can absolutely not have anything overtly political between the pages.