Saturday, September 24, 2011

How Publishing Encourages Gender Discrimination

September 24, 2011

One of my best friends is an excellent writer, ready to be published right now. She made a mistake in her manuscript: her protagonist is a young male.

So far, she’s received a few rejections, and that’s to be expected for any currently unpublished novelist. But when I spoke with another friend who is a literary agent, she told me, “Well, teen boys don’t read. Teen girls prefer reading about girls. No wonder she’s having a tough time.”

I spent hours thinking about this. My feeling is, if male protagonists in young adult fiction aren’t as publishable, the unintended consequence will be fewer and fewer new male adult readers when these boys grow into men. Since my protagonists are mostly grown men, that means my audience will shrink.  The publishing community is attempting unwittingly to destroy most of the adult thriller market.

The publishing industry is full of self-fulfilling prophesies and unintended consequences. Gender discrimination is just one of many. If you write or read thriller fiction, I’d like to know: what do you think?

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

More on "The Future of Publishing"

On Thursday, August 18, 2011, Andrea Brown, President of the Andrea Brown Literary Agency and I presented a  panel discussing "The Future of Publishing in a Digital World" from two perspectives, literary agent and writer, at the Whidbey Island Low Residency MFA in Creative Writing.


For those of you interested, I have placed a downloadable copy of my part of the session available at my web site (http://dskane.com/LinksandFrebies.aspx).