Amazon: http://tinyurl.com/88bunge |
Why 50 SHADES has hit the best seller lists?
I have a few ideas why it is, ahem, A LONG TIME COMIN'! 30 years of struggling to get books out there that women want to read, not what others think they should read!
Having been pubbed in the romance
genre (in print and now digital) for more than 2 decades, I have witnessed
trends. BIG ONES.
The appearance of this erotica
series of 50 SHADES… on the best
seller lists at numbers one through three seems unbelievable until, I think,
you look at the trends in romance and in society over the years.
In the 1980s, the romance genre
exploded into the marketplace. With boomer women getting college degrees and
getting fabulous jobs, they wanted relaxing entertainment at night. (Yes, they
needed it after all those household chores were done!)
By the 1990s, these same women had
grown older, wiser and began to read more serious fiction. While these novels
were female-focused, they were also relationship books which more often than
not included a romance. The boomers’ younger sisters came along—and so did the
boomers’ daughters—wanting to read the romances Mom and Big Sis had liked. What
had begun as women reading romances that were 15% of the paperback sales,
climbed steadily to more than 50%!
But in that decade of the 90s,
other events occurred within the publishing industry and society as a whole.
Within the industry, costs of
producing a book rose. This included the cost of paper and ink, copyediting and
design. But also the venues where books were sold declined in number. With
fewer places to buy books, readers had to go to Big Box stores to find them.
Did they? Yes, but in fewer numbers.
This meant that back in New York
Traditional Publishing Houses [NYTRPH] the accountants began to run the
editorial decisions and the marketing ones, too. They told editors what they
could buy and should buy. The Big Boxes added to the fray by telling publishers
what sold quickest and best. Other types of books, said Big Box, will not be
ordered in any great quantities.
In the offices of NYTRPH, the
scissors came out. Authors who didn’t write this popular sub-genre or that one,
saw their order numbers drag, their covers reduced to flowers or objects that
sold few if any books. The result? These authors either conformed and wrote
what “was selling” (vampires or fairies, anyone?) or the “newest trend” or died
on the vine. Amid all this, if an author wrote a steamy book, she might get
published, but more often than not, she was asked to temper her prose. Use
euphemisms. Allude to passion in metaphors.
In society as a whole, tolerance
for all types of lifestyles and parenting choices meant that readers were more
open to bigger themes in novels. But were they finding those novels except in
what we call literary fiction? I would answer, No.
By the turn of the century, many
readers frustrated with few choices in the genre, began to ask, Is that all
there is? And publishers in the U.K. and in the U.S., began to respond. Using
the internet as the distribution means, publishers like Ellora’s Cave saw the
way to distribute erotica in a manner that was safe, secure from prying eyes
and immediate. And between the covers, readers got what they had not seen in
novels. What had been verboten to
them because of Big Box tactics or publishers’ demurring from printing hot sexy
stories was now available.
The sales of erotica blossomed. The
number of publishers did too. Most of them were on the internet using that
platform to sell the books. Readers responded in the millions. While I
generalize here, I will say that word-of-mouth and ease of access to the
internet certainly provided the impetus for this proliferation.
Suddenly readers had erotic
romances at their fingertips and with a few clicks could have instant
gratification of purchase and reading!
To say that the internet and
on-line publishers have changed the publishing industry is a given. To
recognize that both have spawned the rise of self-publishing mechanisms is also
a fact.
The 50 SHADES success story is, I am certain, built on the 3 previous
decades of growth of the romance genre from Harlequin category types to single
titles that have broadened women’s perspectives and their aspirations. These millions of romance titles have also broadened women’s appetites to read about marvelous,
intimate, mind-blowing sex.
Women not only desire to be
entertained by well-written stories that help her escape to another world. They
demand it. And 50 Shades is the explosive proof that erotica is not an
aberration on the book shelves. It is a manifestation of readers’ growth and
sophistication.
True, 50 Shades had a fabulous marketing and PR introduction. The
well-oiled machine that created the series’ business plan is one we authors
would love to learn more about! While we are not likely to hear those secrets,
we do applaud the success.
It means women are becoming more
savvy about their bodies, their inter-personal communications and their intimate
relationships. It also means we will see more and more erotica on the best
seller lists. Already, we have seen three to four in the top 20 in the past few weeks. Move over 50 Shades. We’re coming through!
Here is a jpeg of my newest,
and erotic romantic western suspense and comedy, IS THAT A GUN IN YOUR
POCKET? 99 cents on Amazon http://tinyurl.com/7o7guuk
And LADY STARLING’s STOCKINGS, Regency erotic romance and suspense, FREE
everywhere! Amazon link: http://tinyurl.com/83hlkgp
3 comments:
Great post Cerise! I look forward to the floodgates of new readers opening - it will be great for all of us ;-)
Wow! Very insightful post, Cerise! looking at three decades of romance and the publishing industry really does put it all into perspective. Very exciting times indeed! Thanks for this!
K D Grace
Great blog. Wow I can remember reading my Mom's books when I was younger and now I'm back and reading wonder stories the sassy seven and other wonderful authors. I have to admit I haven't read the Shades of Grey stories yet. I am finding a great selection for the authors I like.
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