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Writer’s Tips & Tricks Day 4: The Importance of Picking a Genre by Erin Quinn

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The Importance of Picking a Genre

Some authors start with a full and rounded vision of the genre they write.  Others struggle.  I fall into the second pool.  As a young reader, I read two very distinct genres of fiction:  romance and horror.  I loved them both and often wished the two would meet, marry and live happily ever after.  As a writer, I vowed to bring the two genres together.  In my award-winning dark paranormal romances, I do just that.  However, this love story of genres does not necessarily have a HEA and my career has been filled with challenges.  Why?  Because merging genres often leads to diluting and mixed-message marketing.

Start with the book’s cover.  What is the main genre of the book?  Does the cover have a couple in a passionate clench or are there images of carnage and destruction?  Many readers choose the book by the cover and if the images promise a love story and deliver Walking Dead, you’ll have some unhappy readers.  The problem is, how to put a cover on the book that says “Read me!  I have time travel, elves, and demons in my Regency ballroom” without also saying, “I don’t know what in the hell I write so I’ve created a masterpiece of genre soup”?

Before you even deal with the cover challenge, you have to write the book, though.  A romance written while the hero and heroine are on the run from monsters, evil, demons [insert your beast of choice here] is a tricky endeavor.  You must tell this tale with high stakes.  The above mentioned foe must be believable, scary as hell, and fearsome.  Yet somewhere in between battles and chills, you have to create a credible, sustainable romance that has depth and emotion.  It’s no easy feat packing I love you into a ticking-clock, on-the-run, thriller.

These are just a couple of reasons why picking a genre is so important and picking a main genre is essential.  If you are writing for the romance reader, that main genre must be the romance.  Period.  Whatever else goes in the book, the central story must be a love story.  If, at the end of the book, you could go back, remove the romance and have it end the same way, it’s not a romance.  (Period, double exclamation point.)  The escalating tension and emotional stakes must drive the story to its end.  Only a few can divide genres down the middle with success.  The best example I can give you of a story that does this is The Terminator.  It’s action packed, it’s science fiction, it’s time travel and, at the core, it’s a love story.  If Reece hadn’t traveled through time, Sarah Connor wouldn’t have survived the night.  Reece sacrificed his own life because he’d loved Sarah from afar and felt compelled to meet her in the flesh…even when he knew he’d die trying.  Oh, and there’s a Terminator trying to kill them.

Mixing genres can be done and can be done well.  I’ve built a career on it.  What I’ve learned is that you need to prioritize the genres you have in the book in order to keep your reader from thinking it’s a leftover goulash.  Absolutely, put in more ingredients in than your romance, but remember, at some point you’ll have to boil this book down to a blurb, a tag line and an elevator pitch.  If you’ve writing a high concept Tolkienesk fantasy with a Silence of the Lamb FBI heroine and a demon slaying hero in a M/M/F erotic romance, you’re going to have your work cut out for you.  I’m not saying it can be done.  I’m not even saying it wouldn’t be good.

What I am saying, is this:  make sure YOU know what genre you’re writing and if you have multiple genres, make sure you know which is the most important to the story you’re telling.
 2014_TFOB_Erin_headshotNew York Times bestselling author Erin Quinn writes dark paranormal romance for the thinking reader. Her books have been called “riveting,” “brilliantly plotted” and “beautifully written” and have won, placed or showed in the Booksellers Best, WILLA Award for Historical fiction, the Orange Rose, Readers Crown, Golden Quill, Best Books, and Award of Excellence and Holt Medallion. Go to www.erinquinnbooks.com for more information or follow Erin on Facebook or Twitter @ErinQuinnAuthor

Sign up for Erin Quinn’s newsletter or enter Erin’s monthly contest to be automatically added and eligible for free books.  Also look for Erin’s scholarship to the San Diego State University Writers conference on her website.  Just look for the Scholarship link on the left navigation bar.

Erin is offering up a digital copy of  The Five Deaths of Roxanne Love.

Here is a look at Roxanne’s story

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She Cheated Death…

Roxanne Love isn’t human. At least not entirely. She tries to fit in but can’t conceal her ability to defy death—not from the world, not from heaven’s darkest creatures, and not from the Reaper determined to destroy her. Now Roxanne is on the run, her only ally a compelling, dangerous detective with secrets of his own. Against her will, she’s drawn to his quiet strength and heated touch. But can she trust him with the truth?

…Until She Felt Death’s Kiss.

Incognito as guilt-ridden cop Santo Castillo, the Reaper’s plan is simple: get close to Roxanne, uncover the secret of her immortality, and cut it at the source. Yet with his borrowed body come emotions the Reaper hadn’t expected. Now nothing is clear but his conflicted desire to protect the woman he came to kill. As destiny forces them to face an enemy hell-bent on using Roxanne to wipe out all of mankind, she and Santo must choose between love…and salvation.

To Enter for a chance to win. 

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All winner’s will be picked at the end of the month and announce the 1st week of October. 

 

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6 Responses to Writer’s Tips & Tricks Day 4: The Importance of Picking a Genre by Erin Quinn

  1. Glenda September 4, 2014 at 5:56 pm #

    Great point in your tips! It’s pretty irritating to buy a book expecting one story line and finding something totally unrelated taking up the majority of the story.

  2. Janie McGaugh September 4, 2014 at 7:33 pm #

    Great writing tips. I want to know going in what type of book I’m reading. Mixed genre books are fine, as long as I know that’s what they are.

  3. Janie McGaugh September 4, 2014 at 7:33 pm #

    jmcgaugh (at) semo (dot) edu

  4. JoannaM September 6, 2014 at 6:25 pm #

    Oh, Erin. This is by far one of the best tips I’ve read! But only because I’m reading them as a reader and not a writer 😉
    It just bothers me to no end when I’m reading a “romance” but it was obvious the author was more worried about the suspense/mystery/fantasy side of the story that he/she forgot to develop the growth of the main characters as a couple. More so, when they just throw in a few erotic or sex scenes as if to say “there is your romance.” Please, don’t insult your readers like that. WE have feelings too, you know! 😉

  5. Erin Quinn September 9, 2014 at 10:15 pm #

    Thanks everyone for stopping by! I’m glad my blog helped in some way. Sometimes writing these blogs helps me organize my thoughts on my WIP (and do what I say. 🙂

  6. Denise Z September 26, 2014 at 6:40 pm #

    I have been seeing more and more of the mixed genre reads and frankly I love them. I want to be entertained and not just read a story that fits in a slot. Thank you for sharing with us 🙂

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