How Old is Too Old?

I recently had a discussion with a few writers about how old  protagonists can be. To get published by the big six, that is. (The big six are the major publishing companies that dominate the market.) And maybe even smaller, independent presses. All agreed late 20’s, early 30’s was the best age for a main character.

The hero’s journey serves as a structure for much fiction. The hero is always young. It’s basically a coming of age story. Most people will tell you we live in a youth-obsessed culture, at least in the West. The old, no longer revered, become irrelevant, especially with the fast pace of life and technological change.

I read an article a while back in Writers Digest that argues this common view. It said that many readers are 50+ women. They like reading about people their own age. Now a new bestseller has emerged about a 60-something woman who finds love. A romance, no less. New author Hilary Boyd’s novel Thursdays in the Park has become a hit. With its second release–in eBook format. Interesting development. Read about it here.

Random Penguins

Obama has won a resounding victory. Marijuana is now legal in Colorado and Washington. Three states passed marriage equality. And Random House and Penguin are merging. On this last, the Author’s Guild is less than enthusiastic. Read their statement on the Writers Beware blog.

Sandy

Just wanted to wish all the east coast folks a safe ride through Hurricane Sandy. Hunker down, fill up some gallon jugs, eat your canned food, then light a candle and pick up a book — or pen. See you on the other side.

Mystery Tuesdays

I belong to a mystery chat group called Mysteristas. Every Tuesday at 1:00 p.m. EST, which is 11 here in Colorado, we do a twitter chat on some topic involving mysteries. Look for the hash tag #mysteristas. Last week it was age in mystery, the week before that food. We’ve talked about favorite writers, types of detectives, villans, even accessorizing your characters.

Our contributors include Cynthia Kuhn, Diane Vallere, Donna White Glaser, Kendel Lynn, Kristi Belcamino, Lisa Love Harris and Susan M. Boyer. Most Thursdays we have an interview with a mystery writer, often with a new release.

Here’s the website. See you on Tuesdays.

Minz on the Future of Publishing

James Minz is Senior Editor with Baen Books. He spoke at Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers’ Colorado Gold conference yesterday. Minz’s topic was “Welcome to the Ghetto.” What ghetto? Science fiction, fantasy and horror, still “suffering” from the reputation of being “those people” in some neighborhoods, but rocking out in their own.

Minz made some passing comments about the state of publishing, a subject that is binding many electrons on thousands of blogs, tweets and Facebook pages. Publishing is changing with the rise of the eBook, and many people have proclaimed its demise. Their dire predictions? Electronic books will replace print. Indie authors will replace the publishing house. All the services of the publishing house will become separate cottage industries—indie editors, indie book cover artists, indie format creators. And agents will go the way of the unicorn. You get the picture.

But is it true? What did Minz contribute to this conversation?

That the Baen Books model might be the happy medium that is already working. Baen started doing eBooks thirteen years ago. They still do print books. They still do their own editing and book cover design. Still talk to agents and allow direct submissions by authors. And it’s working. Instead of cutting some things to the bone as other houses have been forced to do in dealing with this big shift, Baen is maybe taking its belt in a notch. They’re surviving and thriving.

Publishing will survive this shift. Yeah, it will be a little different. Authors will have more options. Some great indie books will be posted. Some bad ones. Traditional publishing will continue and publish some good and some – well, not as stellar. Agents will still take their favorite editors to lunch and sell books.

Writer’s organizations will still put on great conferences choked full of information on craft and the business. Congratulations to RMFW on their 30th anniversary.