Our thanks to Linda Chamberlain who reports on the
talk given by Eloisa James at the recent RNA General Meeting.
New York
Times best-selling author Eloisa James is a great supporter of literature.
It’s
something she does in her day job as Professor of English literature
specialising in Shakespeare at Fordham University in New York – a job she would
never give up.
And it’s something
she does by osmosis as a prolific writer of historical romantic fiction. We all
know that it’s the ‘role’ of hugely successful authors to effectively bolster
those further down the earnings ladder. With a smile, she reminds us that the
entire literary department is included in this scenario.
She is
disappointed that so little nurturing of careers goes on in the industry,
saddened that so many mid-list authors are thrown out through a perpetually
revolving door if their sales don’t improve.
As the writer of, she thinks, 23 books, which have sold in their
millions she says a thick skin is essential. Eloisa had some brilliant advice
for her RNA audience in London.
Be
Machiavellian – know your strengths, your weaknesses and read books that are selling.
Stop reading and you lose sight of what is at the heart of the market. Study
those ‘reader pleasure moments’ that make a book special and keep the pages
turning.
Get in
the Zen – she admits to a strong ego. She’s left a publishing house that wasn’t
serving her well and she won’t suffer an editor who’s not up to the job. She
has sufficient clout to say NO but sometimes she has to accept that she might
be wrong and re-write. Remember, she says, ‘Your editor doesn’t own you; your
agent is there to serve you.’
Have a
thick skin – she describes herself as the queen of such scenes as near-death
and outside sex but ‘not everyone will like what you are writing’. High sales
increase your chances of nasty reviews and vicious blogs. Never respond. She
keeps a book at hand featuring bad reviews for good writers as an antidote.
Be a
businesswoman – you have to understand royalty statements and contracts.
Writing
can be high risk and humiliating – there were murmurings of understanding from
her audience at this point. Writing about relationships and sex bring the
inevitable questions of what does your husband think? Have you done all those things? Remember that romance is a fantastic
genre; its triumphs may be small but it helps people through the bad times.
Beware of
critique groups – they can iron out ‘that voice’, the thing that makes your
book original. Better to have one critique buddy.
She
finished her talk with a reminder that will resonate throughout the RNA with
its remarkable New Writers' Scheme.
‘You have
to nurture the bottom if there’s to be a top,’ she said. ‘Readers need great
books to read.’
Eloisa is
prolific but she can’t write all of them.
Thank you, Linda
The RNA Blog is
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4 comments:
I love the comment about romance novels 'helping people through the bad times' - not an unworthy achievement in my opinion!
Great post...wish i could have been there!!
lx
Thanks so much for posting this - great advice!
Thank you for covering the talk, Linda. Wish I could have been there!
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