Shook @ the part where you're like "you never know who you're reaching" because I watched your videos for advice before I got a book deal and now I'm a #1 NYT bestseller 😂 SO YES, YOU NEVER KNOW
@WhiteBloggerBlackSpecs
2 жыл бұрын
🙌
@Autumn-myst
2 жыл бұрын
👏 Amazing!!!
@strawberriesandcandy
2 жыл бұрын
This is the crossover I needed to see omg
@goodgrief888
2 жыл бұрын
🎉 That’s awesome! And so inspirational I, personally, think that EVERYONE should write, and not even worry that much about the goal of getting published. Just write. But even better if you can make a living at it if that’s what a person wants!!!!!!
@annejia5382
Жыл бұрын
heeey xiran 💙
@Ms_Timmie92
2 жыл бұрын
Black writer here! I don’t feel the need to rep my oppression. It’s been done to death and I think most of us are quite sick of it. Why can’t our stories just be stories like those of other backgrounds and nationalities?
@hardnewstakenharder
2 жыл бұрын
Me: "I'm going to write today." *Alexa uploads a new video* Me: "I'm going to write today, in about 40 minutes."
@SensibleSoulHealing
2 жыл бұрын
In this boat with you!
@Pacman1330
2 жыл бұрын
I am in this picture and I don't like this.
@victoriacaine7040
2 жыл бұрын
If only 5 people read my book on a cold winters night and find comfort, I will be over the moon. It's not about "making it big" for everyone, just finishing the novel, and putting it out there is enough for me :)
@arianab.8364
2 жыл бұрын
Regarding authortube authors not writing well, I think it really boils down to the fact that it’s easier to give advice than to follow it - which applies to every aspect of life, really. But that doesn’t render the advice any less valid or useful.
@uglymelon6721
2 жыл бұрын
This fr
@aurematic
2 жыл бұрын
BS. An artisan who knows how to do the job can teach you how to do it properly.
@arianab.8364
2 жыл бұрын
@@aurematic You can know how to do something and still not execute it flawlessly. Not to mention that whether or not you consider an author to have successfully followed their own advice is subjective in the first place.
@lolaloves6574
2 жыл бұрын
@@aurematic Yes but that doesn’t mean people who aren’t amazing don’t offer good advice. You might even find advice from a friend or family member who barely knows anything about writing.
@ThanhTriet600
2 жыл бұрын
If you can't do, teach.
@jayreese8522
2 жыл бұрын
With regards to the "too many writers": being realistic isn't about saying "you might not get there" - that's pessimism. Realism is acknowledging the odds, knowing that it's hard, but understanding that you can work hard enough to try and do it. I don't think most people actually know what being a realist looks like, but that takes time and growth.
@ChampionMarauder
2 жыл бұрын
Is it even a case of too many writers if 90+ percent of them don't even finish writing their books?
@chloelianna
2 жыл бұрын
@@ChampionMarauder True, and some writers don't even write novels/prefer writing short stories, nor want to be published in the sense that they can potentially earn monetary compensation for their work.
@leech1355
2 жыл бұрын
I think people should follow their dream regardless of the odds. Yes, sometimes it simply isn’t feasible or within someone’s means to do so, but I don’t think odds should be a deciding factor if it’s the only factor.
@obobob1867
2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. And people can self publish. Just because it is hard in the traditional publishing sense, doesn't mean that is what everyone wants too.
@AZ-ty7ub
2 жыл бұрын
And of people who DO actually finish a book, most of those, at the risk of being negative, are of... dubious quality. Just focus on making the best product you can, get beta readers, take constructive criticism, and worry about yourself, not how many other people there are out there.
@rosalynransawbooks
2 жыл бұрын
On the BIPOC one, I also think there’s a lot of misunderstanding (willful?) around “writing diversely” and the pressure for BIPOC writers to write trauma narratives. I think unless you’re purposefully making a commentary/satire about society, it’s extremely unlikely that there’s not some level of diversity in your book world, and that a lot of non-BIPOC writers use a “fear of portraying diverse characters wrong” as a cop-out for not writing them. BUT there’s also a pressure for BIPOC writers to either 1) write a trauma narrative about their #ownvoices character, or 2) talk about the implications of race regardless of the content of the book. I do understand on some level that race has an implicit effect on community/culture etc. that can’t be completely ignored, but I think more often than not people look to BIPOC writers to use their stories to educate non-BIPOC writers about their experience instead of being “allowed” to write stories that feature diverse pov characters doing the same things that non-diverse povs get to.
@dragonuprising8378
2 жыл бұрын
I 100% agree with this and it's honestly getting tiring at this point😥
@liegeman717
2 жыл бұрын
I added a heroic black woman in my book because that’s who I saw when I came to the part where I needed a character for that part of the story. She continued to be a regular character in my book. As a pantzer {SP?) writer I sometimes am surprised by what I discover when writing. When I see a character as a member of a certain race, gender, or lifestyle that’s the way I write them and people who judge be damned. Because to me, that is who the character was meant to be. Because of today’s issues I did give her a telling comment after she asked someone to call the police but mostly she’s just another person dealing with life, her friends and coworkers. I’m a white male doing the same.
@dragonuprising8378
2 жыл бұрын
@@liegeman717 I definitely agree with this since I do the same with my characters
@nonono9194
Жыл бұрын
Super cringey anyone who thinks anyone who isn't white needs to "educate" white people, nobody gets to *lecture* me about anything, if a story is good enough I'll gravitate towards it regardless of melanin levels, I've never felt entitled that anyone care about what I write, I've made it so good that it's gravitated towards. If you aren't white and you're under this woke brainwashing, stop talking about your skin colour cause frankly you're not special or a victim and it makes me cringe and be offput being around anyone like that, write something amazing and success will follow
@BettyBonkers
2 жыл бұрын
BIPOC pressure Absolutely yes! I am not Cornell West, Bell Hooks or any other black thinker. I want to write about spear-wielding amazons who capture princes and upturn continents and not consider what it will mean for whoever.
@stephaniewozny3852
2 жыл бұрын
I would love to read that, yes plz.
@ChampionMarauder
2 жыл бұрын
And I would actually read that unlike anything by Cornell West or Bell Hooks.
@A.cyn2
2 жыл бұрын
I totally agree! I get so caught up because I write about black fairies, Mayan giants, etc. I don’t want to put myself or my characters into a box.
@zustorm
2 жыл бұрын
Agree! I feel like there is a SERIOUS lack of indigenous characters/issues written about, but I don’t want my work to always include it. I just feel like if I don’t do it, no one will 😭
@imani2160
2 жыл бұрын
I agree, you shouldn't be pigeon-holed. Write what you want, everything doesn't have to have a "message". My only thing (and this is entirely personal) is no, you don't have to write about black people (just for example, since I'm black) and "black issues" but I'd (again personally) find it weird if you want to write a world where white people, etc. exist but no black people exist (if you're a black writer)? Don't get me wrong, if in your world everyone is green or blue or silver, or they live in Northern Europe in the dark ages then yeah fine, of course that makes sense. But it feels like an internalized oppression (and who could blame you, given the state of publishing over the past century for absorbing and internalizing some of that) if only the people who look like you don't exist in your imaginary world. IDK. But I agree...I don't think anyone should *have* to write anything they don't want to.
@jamiedamato8220
2 жыл бұрын
If we had an actual New Adult category and were able to dedicatedly market that content toward "young adults" and YA toward "teens" it would solve so many of these problems uhhhh
@readem_blog
2 жыл бұрын
Once I saw someone give a 1 star review (after dnfing) to a YA A Christmas Carol retelling Bc the mc was “too much of a bad person” GIRL THATS THE POINT OF THE BEGINNING OF A CHRISTMAS CAROL 💀💀
@amy-suewisniewski6451
2 жыл бұрын
BAHAHAHAHA That's too funny 🤣
@ThanhTriet600
2 жыл бұрын
Most of the one star reviews on my novel say they did not finish because there are too many LGBT characters and an LGBT agenda.
@daveshif2514
5 ай бұрын
@@ThanhTriet600those are actually 5 star reviews to the right people 😊
@nicolettedoe3932
2 жыл бұрын
Highkey agree with most of these but the biggest no for me was the idea that you're wasting your time if you wanna be a writer because you have so much competition. Yes, competition can be hard and you should definitely manage your expectations when it comes to trad pub but at the same time you wouldn't be a writer if you didn't enjoy at least some of the aspects of writing and you're never really "wasting your time" if you're doing something you enjoy, that's just called having a hobby. Just because it might not sustain a career one day doesn't mean it isn't valuable to you
@nikkimirhosseyni9535
2 жыл бұрын
I work at BN and I have to be honest, the “same cover syndrome” is the LEAST noticeable to me in YA. I can find a book easily in there, but any adult genre, it’s a hunt. I have shelved multiple titles together thinking they are the same one. It’s a PROBLEM. Historical fiction has exactly 3 covers and that is it, I swear.
@RoseKindred
2 жыл бұрын
Then you get a customer like me: "Yes, I am looking for this book. I kinda forgot the title but the cover has a woman with a sword and a lion in the background in an old city." Yea... I am horrible.
@paulapoetry
2 жыл бұрын
Adult Domestic Suspense has Same Cover Syndrome, and Similar Title Syndrome, to the worst degree, out of any genre I read. The word "Girl" in titles; references to family relationships, especially "The (Select Word) Wife/Husband/Girlfriend". Or maybe "Lies" or "Liars" can be in the mix...! 😄❤
@jessip8654
2 жыл бұрын
I recently found two contemporary novels in the store side by side with the same couple in the same clothes on the same sunshine yellow covers. Different authors, different stories. The only difference was the couple were in a slightly different pose.
@KaiInMotion
2 жыл бұрын
Jessi P Limited stock photo options lol.
@boxoweasels
2 жыл бұрын
On the realism vs discouragement thing, can we talk about the oh so often repeated idea you should just give up writing unless you're the sort of person who can't not write? Like if you don't get up at 4 am to write before sending the kids to school after you get home at 1 am from your second job, then you're just not cut out to be a writer so give up. I can't stand that attitude.
@LazyDogsRanch
2 жыл бұрын
The whole can't not write thing is annoying. Of course you can not write. Billions of people do it every single day. It's called not writing. I think there is a group of people who like to feel as if it's a calling, like becoming a nun or something.
@boxoweasels
2 жыл бұрын
@@LazyDogsRanch Yes, they get to feel special and maybe even eliminate some competition if they're lucky.
@SensibleSoulHealing
2 жыл бұрын
I withdrew my query from an agent who had sub tweeted a query letter from a writer and posted it on twitter making fun of it. They weren't technically wrong about their critique, but it was tasteless to post it on Twitter the way they did and by ridiculing the people they are asking for queries from. I withdrew because it felt like a stab in the back to the entire writing community. It was taken down later that day, but I will never unsee it.
@tonibetzner263
2 жыл бұрын
That is beyond unprofessional. I'm sorry for your friend. People should be better than that
@jtf101
2 жыл бұрын
It gets in a even weirder place when you're biracial or multiracial, because there's always half amount of people who will say you're not x enough to write about your own culture or a specific POC POV (and that you don't really know your culture because you're only half.) At that point, what are you supposed to do? Just write solidly about biracial/multirical POV? Because that's not how the experience goes for a lot of biracial/multiracial people growing up. Usually looks fluctuate as you grow up; like I looked mostly on side until I turned 14, then I started looking wholly like the other side before settling on what everyone seems to call an "exotic" look. Like I understand a lot of people who say you should only write from your POV or culture or race, but it gets really complicated when considering other factors like the whole multiracial thing.
@ThisSecretCat
2 жыл бұрын
Saaaame! As someone who’s multiracial, but very Westernized, seeing a lot of agents asking for diverse stories, things you can’t find in Western culture, I’m like damn, I don’t fit there either. Not too grounded in my cultural roots, not white enough to query. Yikes!
@AMMA83
2 жыл бұрын
Anyone of any race can query. If they love your work they might sign you. And not every POC writes books related to a non-westernised culture. All the best with that!
@AMMA83
2 жыл бұрын
Although I do appreciate there is sadly pressure to write ‘in your culture’!
@stormvexed
2 жыл бұрын
That first person had their dream shattered when they were little and now they're just a dream shattering machine where they just don't want people to try anymore. Like you never know until you try and if you want something you'll keep trying. Why the hell do you have to tell other people not to do something just because you're scared to do it?!? Augh I've been fighting these people my entire life. Their fears and anxieties are not based on reality at all.
@simpossibly_tiffani
2 жыл бұрын
As a black woman and writer, I write whatever I feel like I want to write. Because of woke culture, it’s marginalized people more than show it’s “inclusivity” and that’s sad. I don’t describe my characters. I’ll give small hints of maybe the texture of their hair or a small detail like that but I let my readers imagine what the characters look like because in my world, race isn’t an issue or a concern that people need to have. Enjoy the story and the writing. I brought some made up people to life 😊 if people think I’m betraying the cause cause I ain’t talking about black stuff, then don’t read my book :)
@miaqueen9578
2 жыл бұрын
Everytime I start to watch a tv show or read a book where it focuses on a persons race, im automatically turned off by that. For example, the show Brigiton. I LOVE that they have a main male character who is a black man, but I only love it so much because they dont focus on his skin color. They dont talk about how oppressed he is as a black man. I love that he is just a prince(or was it a lord?) and he fell in love with a "common" girl. I'm a woman. I dont need to be told he is a kind man, or good looking or smart "even though" he is black. Like seriousely. He is a person and I dont give a shit about his color. I give a shit about his personality and if I think he is good looking it's because i have eyes..not because some tv show trys "guilt" me into liking a person because they think they need to in order for people to see past their color. I hope I made sense lol
@simpossibly_tiffani
2 жыл бұрын
@@miaqueen9578 Same!! I agree with you 100%!!!!! And I hate that as a black person, most things creative wise has to be about this struggle and I’m sorry, I just can’t deal with the constant oppressive talk. Sometimes, I feel and believe it’s continually projected on to us so that we remain in a state of oppression. I agree with you though and I avoided Brighton because I wasn’t sure how they were going to portray him (because most things now are so woke and saturated with race talk) but now that you said that, I’m gonna give it a watch.
@caileycarrot
2 жыл бұрын
@@miaqueen9578 yesss!!!
@TomiaMacQueen
2 жыл бұрын
@@miaqueen9578 I agree but in reality Bridgerton DID touch on the race issue explicitly, briefly and very clearly in the main character's argument with his Godmother as he is rushing to clear his home to leave London. It was beautifully, clearly and most definitely done. And I love that they didn't la la land ignore it but they didn't keep the focus on it longer than the two minute conversation. I prefer to have it addressed when present and then have the author move on to the bigger picture of the story if race is not the focus.
@nonono9194
Жыл бұрын
That's great, you put your humanity before goofy stuff like skin colour, don't let the idiotic masses pressure you into becoming another drone who's programmed to reiterate whatever thoughts the elites program into them, we're all human first, write whatever the f you want, my skin is white and im a guy and i do that to, I write any gender/any skin colour and anyone telling me otherwise can get to f.
@charlesyanni5195
2 жыл бұрын
What if I'm writing a story that I just need to get out, even if it doesn't sell? If I don't write the fiction that I'm writing, I feel like I might pop! Even though my stories don't seem very popular, they're popular with me! I love historical fiction, know a lot about the period, and need to write silly stories set in that time. When I finish, I feel like: "Aah! Aah! Now I feel good!" Pretty sure no one else "needs" to read them. But once they're done, I'll be able to forget about it! Otherwise, writing them preys on my mind!
@victoriacaine7040
2 жыл бұрын
I love that, and I feel the same way :)
@shaunaisazombie
2 жыл бұрын
I don't think anyone is doomed to fail if they pursue publishing because most of them simply just give up at some point. Gave up isn't a synonym of didn't win. I wish I remember which author said this, but I saw a link to their blog where they said they'd been writing for over 20-25 (?) years, queried several books, and didn't get an agent until they switched genres. Not everyone's made of the stuff to get rejection year after year, but we all know it's a numbers game already. Most things in life are. If a 20 year old starts writing and querying 2 books a year, the probability of getting the attention of trad publishing skyrockets compared to someone who only writes and queries one book for one year before giving up.
@pandimensions
2 жыл бұрын
Ok, the "adults should read adult books" got me XD I will say, I would love to read more books suitable for my age, but since I was a teenager it's become increasingly difficult to find books "for my age" that I enjoy. I hate sex in books, I usually struggle with graphic violence in books, I usually dislike romance in books (none of these things are bad, this is personal taste). I love fantasy that is whimsical and not too bogged down in world-building at the prose level (there are exceptions, hello Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell). I have found some absolute gems in YA and then adult fantasy, but I find myself gravitating back to middle grade because it's the only place where I can be guaranteed not to have to deal with graphic sex & violence. I wish, truly, that there had been more teen books which didn't focus on romance for me to move to as I grew up, and that there were more adult fantasy books which didn't make everything 'gritty' and unpleasant to read about. I want to read books that speak to my experience as an adult, without constantly being worried that I'm going to be upset by the subject matter. All this to say, the way that different age groups are catered to in the book market has meant that the number of fiction books I read has steadily declined over my lifetime, and this makes me really sad.
@imani2160
2 жыл бұрын
I'm sure there are more people that feel the way you do. Sounds like you're well-read, can you write? Do what a lot of authors do. Write the books you want to read! I don't mean to sound flippant if you don't think you're a writer. But honestly, most of the people I know who write, write because there's either a story in their heart or a book they want to read that doesn't exist!😃
@pandimensions
2 жыл бұрын
@@imani2160 Thank you for the lovely reply! Writing the book I wish exists is definitely the plan, I figure that even if I struggle to publish I'll at least get to read it myself and share it with friends who feel similarly!
@amy-suewisniewski6451
2 жыл бұрын
I totally relate to this. I for example love Horror and Thrillers... but I also hate graphic violence and don't care for explicit sex scenes. I gravitate to YA Thrillers because I find they can have all the sophistication of an "adult" Thriller, but don't get graphic on the violent details. Books like "Sadie" and "Little Monsters" didn't shy away from difficult content, but presented in a way that I could enjoy. I almost always pick up YA Thrillers over adult because of this. I just don't know how to safely navigate the adult space to find just what I want in genres like Thrillers.
@pandimensions
2 жыл бұрын
@@amy-suewisniewski6451 you hit the nail on the head with “don’t know how to safely navigate the adult space” - I wish books had content warnings or some kind of rating system beyond age categories! That way I could at least go in forewarned. I end up having to scour reviews and synopses trying to gauge whether a book is going to be ok for me or not, and I’m sure I miss out on great reads through being over-cautious.
@BrekkeEl
2 жыл бұрын
I like that you brought up the unpopular opinion of YA that’s not actually being written for teenagers. so why did publishing axe NA when there’s clearly a market?!? Also I am a Heartbreathings Stan and I think she’s legit as far as self pub courses.
@SensibleSoulHealing
2 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with this. The newer adults 19-35 need NA!😭😩
@darkwriter_xx94
2 жыл бұрын
I agree especially since my work falls more clearly in a potential NA category. I had a agent tell me that I should market my novel as ya-crossover instead of using the new adult label because of stigma.
@BrekkeEl
2 жыл бұрын
@@darkwriter_xx94 The crossover label is so problematic. Because it’s essentially hijacking YA from teenagers to serve an adult readership. And I love a good YA but I thinking we had a more robust NA market we’d see more space for these cross-over type books (and college books!!).
@crystalb5068
2 жыл бұрын
I agree, you really should do more writing vlogs. I think you're good at them, and I always find them inspiring and encouraging as someone who wants to be traditionally published in the future!
@marianikolaou2751
2 жыл бұрын
I'm in the process of editing a multi-POV low fantasy thriller for adults, so I guess there is actually a market for me lol. I absolutely adore thrillers and tried very hard to write one.
@HeartBreathings
2 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you for the compliment about the course!! That means so much to me!!
@AlexaDonne
2 жыл бұрын
I just recommended it to a friend thinking about self publishing literally yesterday!
@bookedbydanielle
2 жыл бұрын
As someone who is drafting their first novel and loves to deep dive KZitem, I can definitely agree that the self pub route is super popularize and promoted on authortube 😬 thank you for being real about trad pub, but also encouraging people try it regardless!
@DesperationLasts
2 жыл бұрын
I'm in the trenches right now. I've only queried about 25 agents. The rejections are just as painful. I looked up what makes something classify as horror and the only common theme that people could agree on was that horror should incite fear of some kind in some way. With a vague description like that it isn't surprising everything gets lumped into thriller. To me, horror should be almost painful to read. It's the kind of fear that crawls under your skin and turns your stomach. Thriller should be the kind of fear that makes you anxious and paranoid. Thoughts?
@Amber-jb8su
2 жыл бұрын
I think any genre can incite fear just like any other emotion, depending on the situation. Horror shouldn’t just be about fear, but testing the limits of its audience. How much can they stand? Is there excessive gore? A bathtub full of maggots? Use the senses. Stephen King almost didn’t publish Pet Sematary because of how messed up it was in his eyes. That’s what horror writers should be striving for.
@Lookintobookz
Жыл бұрын
i self published my book. i did not want to have to wait around for a publisher to take on my novel and honestly i’m fine with owning 100% of my work without having to sell it. thank you for helping me get the balls to actually publish it
@freyakevitz
2 жыл бұрын
Fake reviews have made me lost faith at this point. I wish people were honest when leaving reviews. Oh and Alexa, for whatever reason, I find your voice soothing! Love your contents.
@LindsayPuckett
2 жыл бұрын
DYING that you added the Lindsay Puckett comment LOOOOOOL
@AlexaDonne
2 жыл бұрын
I got you!
@LindsayPuckett
2 жыл бұрын
@@AlexaDonne LOL
@annaivanova4360
2 жыл бұрын
I think the problem with adults reading YA and then complaining about them exists because there is some obvious need for some kind of genre for adults that existing "adult" books don't fulfill at all and existing YA books kinda scratch really well, so unless we divorce that something from the actual YA and give it a name and start publishing that sort of books the problem will not go away.
@KillsAllHumanity
2 жыл бұрын
Oof, i gotta say as someone who jas worked in the children/teen dept at a library that the take that you shouldnt read books for younger readers because they are "dumbed down" is far from the truth. Most childrens books, esp books aimed at primary grades, have LOTS of vocabulary words in them in order to expose kids to words they might not know. Additionally, most "adult" books, newspaper articles et al are written at a 4th grade level to ensure the widest population of ppl can read them. So not necessarily a bad take, but certainly a misinformed one.
@AlexaDonne
2 жыл бұрын
Totally agree! I have in fact gotten notes from my editor and copy editor for a word or two they thought was weird or unfamiliar and usually I'm like "it's the best word! They can look it up" lol. Obviously I'm not like LET'S POUR ALL THE 2 DOLLAR WORDS IN but sometimes there's just a GREAT word and it fits, and yeah it's an SAT word no regerts! That's what I love about writing--when you can use a carefully applied "fancy" word because it's specific and evocative.
@KillsAllHumanity
2 жыл бұрын
@@AlexaDonne for sure!
@cifge_404
2 жыл бұрын
I'm 97% certain that my ability to either "sense" what an unfamiliar word means or take a pretty good guess at what it means based on how it's constructed (affixes, suffixes, similarity to words I know) is due to the sheer amount of reading I did when I was in first to seventh grade. I used to read for eight hours straight once I got all my work done, it was actually kind of a problem. And of course because my parents didn't try to limit me to the books that were "in my age level," I read literally everything in the house, and made a pretty good dent in my local library's collection. Of course, when I was at those ages, the majority of my reading _was_ in the middle grade section, but I still didn't limit myself to any genre (or even know genres mattered all that much), and I read a ton of YA as well, with the occasional adult fiction endeavor (more often than not it was Karen Kingsbury lol). This is also the main reason I have such diverse reading tastes--to this _day_ I have trouble telling people what my favorite genres are.
@SensibleSoulHealing
2 жыл бұрын
So, I think YA should realistically be for teens, but the problem I see with it is that we have a huge generation gap between the popular authors in adult and the YA authors. So you have millennials and gen z who are adults now or becoming so- and they want to read books with the same flare and drama the YA books they had growing up.
@OpenBookReading
2 жыл бұрын
For the first one, I really think it depends on what someone's goals and motivations are for writing. It can be fulfilling for its own sake, even if it's just a hobby or a small source of income. While I do hope to publish and earn money from my work, I also enjoy the writing process itself (usually!) and am willing to view projects that didn't work out as a learning process. I do think it's important to understand the realities of trying to make a living as a writer, but that doesn't have to mean being totally cynical about it. It can still be worthwhile even while not being traditionally published, not a bestseller, not earning a full-time income, etc.
@LynnaKatriel
2 жыл бұрын
For the working on sequel books/series books before publishing...here's how I think about it. As a reader, I can't tell you how many times I've read a book series where book 1 was really good and hyped me up for the rest of the series, and then the rest of the series was poorly thought out, went back and forth on plot points seemingly based on reader reactions, or was overall a let down and a bit of a mess. I don't work on sequels because I'm under the delusion that future editors won't want to make big changes, I'm writing them so that I have considered many aspects of where the story will go so that I don't find myself caught unawares with publishing deadlines and no solid plans for a satisfying ending. Plus, if I don't have to change everything, I can leave a satisfying trail of clues for the reader spread out throughout the series pointing them to how the story will resolve. Finally, it can really help me realize problems with and come up with fresh ideas for the first book. Just my two cents, I am sure when I am hopefully a published author someday with years of professional experience my opinion may be different but for now I'm enjoying the ride.
@melodylake18
2 жыл бұрын
I will say, I think reading books meant for all ages at any age is a good thing. Children are allowed and encouraged to read classics, often characterized as ‘adult’ and adults can appreciate good literature for any age group. I read The Giver and Laura Ruby’s York series as an adult and the books are transcendent in their enjoyment and lessons. Yes, some books are written ‘down’ to young adults, and bashing a book in your reviews because you are not the intended audience is silly, but I find the ones that assume the intelligence of their audience are more enjoyable.
@aradiasnowdon7016
2 жыл бұрын
I tend to read and write adult fiction, but some of my favorite books/series of all time are YA. Freak the Mighty is an extremely powerful book to me, and I have read it a few times in adulthood despite it being written for middle school aged children.
@rebeccadey
2 жыл бұрын
I think another point regarding the opinion about the query trenches and someone "not really having been in them" also comes down to, not just number of agents queried, but authors researching PROPER agents for their books. A person who got an agent fast and with fewer queries may have gotten lucky, but they might have also been more selective in choice of agents. Some people query 100 agents who happen to rep fantasy, for instance, but don't necessarily check the nuances of the kinds of fantasy they rep (contemp but not high, etc). I do think that should be considered as well in regards to some people's success in gaining representation.
@MarysiaKosowski
2 жыл бұрын
I 100% agree with the writer who said that no one should feel "pressure to put racial commentary in a story where racial commentary doesn't fit." I find this aspect of today's publishing climate really wearying. Some excellent opinions expressed throughout this video in general, as well as great responses from you, Alexa. :) I enjoyed thinking about these issues.
@Kelly-Martin
2 жыл бұрын
18:03-- They call everything a thriller... YES! I've seen some YA horror books (I write horror... mostly YA) come out originally as horror, then change to thriller bc thriller was selling better at that moment which I GET (heck, I've even thought about changing my categories to thriller... but it wouldn't work for my books... but I've thought it lol). Also, yes, everyone should follow Lindsay Puckett. She's amazing.
@briannaremusbooks
2 жыл бұрын
This might be unpopular but I remember when bookstores didn’t have YA, the only had teen and adult sections. YA was supposed to bridge the gap and include books that cover those late teens early 20s discovery years and now YA has essentially become the new teen genre covering ages 12-18. I think teen should be teen, YA should be YA and adult should be adult. They’re ALL separate things!
@ulla7378
2 жыл бұрын
x) Regarding 'catering the adults for YA': I was irritated about teenager characters acting as teenagers when I was teenager myself. It tended to be far too over the top.
@bubblegumbishonen
2 жыл бұрын
The comment about reading books your age to "expand your vocabulary" rubbed me the wrong way so bad. I spent YEARS in college studying classics and adult books written ages ago that I absolutely hated, and the way I talk still has yet to change (if anything, all the essays forced me to write so proper, not those books). You can read whatever you want, so I will continue to read my Percy Jackson books despite being 26 now :) Reading certain age books also helps writers to write within that age group and genre. If you want to expand your vocabulary, then read a dictionary and utilize the thesaurus regularly when your writing journey is underway.
@dsa513
2 жыл бұрын
I think the fear is that you'll be 50 and still reading Harry Potter. Ja I'll probably get to Harry Potter when I'm 50. Whatever though read wide, narrow, just read!!
@dayenoms6011
2 жыл бұрын
I watch quiet a few channels here on KZitem about authoring. And I am an aspiring author. I have no idea how I want to publish, because books are art, and people are mean. But we are all human right? Thank you for the vids! I love your channel!
@madelinejameswrites
2 жыл бұрын
You manage to talk about spicy opinions and not be offensive and I love it!
@valeriemcdonald440
2 жыл бұрын
I have been reading books for 8-10 year olds in French, so I'm still expanding my vocabulary 😜. But actually, it has reminded me of why I used to read so much as a kid. I find it very difficult to find books to get into as an adult. I think I want more novellas with properly marked chapters and a quick hook from the start. And 'bookish' dialogue.
@sistersauthorsfriendsincanada
2 жыл бұрын
Okay, I just have to say . . . I ADORE YOU! Your videos are always so fun. You are always so spunky. And you always, always pack your videos with super-informative content-and lots 'n lots of cats in your vlog b-rolls! My first book was trad published with a company in the U.K., but I knew nothing about marketing at the time, so it did not do well. At all. I'm not saying that's the only reason, but it was a big part of it. Then my publisher changed the way they did business and became a hybrid-publisher. Since I couldn't afford to go with them again, I chose to self pub my second book and will be doing the same with my third. 🙂 Unrelated to this particular video but something I thought you might find interesting: (fun fact) there are a total of 30 literary agents in Canada. 30! I shake my head every time I think about it. And based on my own personal research, literary management in Canada simply does not exist.
@suereimer7505
2 жыл бұрын
Agree! As a Canadian author, I was shocked to discover this!
@sistersauthorsfriendsincanada
2 жыл бұрын
@@suereimer7505 I know! It's crazy, right?
@shadowm2k7
Жыл бұрын
Ugh, yessss to the "morale" section!!! The villain in my book says and does evil things because she's evil 😭😭😭!!! Not because I'M EVIL!!!!!!
@annalisem6836
2 жыл бұрын
Re: the realism versus optimism comments, I truly believe that any writer can be successful in a publishing sphere in that they have the potential, but there will be a gap between people who are willing to do the work and people who are not. And I don't mean people doing the work by swapping their writing time for sleeping, but people who believe that their books need multiple drafts, read their work aloud, use the feedback they get, and above all keep going and improving. Which are the kind of norms that I see Authortube people setting, for the most part - they are all working really hard, really thinking about their work, and seeking out feedback to improve. So I don't think they're selling a fantasy at all. They're showing a pathway, if anything. Talent and luck do exist, but they are always going to be overtaken in the end by hard work and especially people who take feedback as part of that hard work. I think that being "realistic" in an overly negative way is another way of selling a fairytale, basically, by trying to insinuate that the people who broke through did so by talent and/or luck so the rest of the peasants shouldn't even try. When I look at successful writers, 95% of the time I see a mixture of humility in their ability to take feedback as well as acceptance of writing as a grind. Since I'm going to try to emulate those two characteristics, I'm NOT going to waste my time getting depressed about statistics. I'm just going to try to write MY books and make them the best that they can possibly be.
@folklorefanatic7193
2 жыл бұрын
If I had 50 rejections on a manuscript without any requests for a partial, I would query with a different manuscript... or at least redo the query letter. That amount is more than the number of good, non-sucky agents in my country per genre that work in that genre.
@LisaEmeritaHandmade
2 жыл бұрын
Why gate-keep rejection? Weird flex.
@helixsnow3722
2 жыл бұрын
I'm self publishing because I want complete creative control over my work. Especially because I want to turn it into a graphic novel when I'm finished. I write grimdark fantasy novels. My books come with art and maps. It cost a bit of money. I work a day job and spend a lot of money on paying beta readers, professional developmental editors, and already have my copy editor and book cover artist picked out. I really hate the selfpub stigma. Not all of us throw out books full of grammatical errors and typos.
@luisaah5707
Жыл бұрын
The main character comment of being a particular decent is very interesting. I think a diverse cast of characters work well for specific books is great. I can imagine the pressure the pressure is always there.
@genesisfunes7551
2 жыл бұрын
10:37 regarding the BIPOC writer pressure, and im gonna broaden this into minority writer pressure i both agree and disagree, as a queer poc ive run into this alot and ima try to put it down in a way thats cohesive. There definitely is a pressure to 'rep the struggle', and we shouldnt feel pressure to put racial or any other social commentary in a story if it doesnt need it, *however* i think that pressure fails to makes us remember that poc, queer, disabled, and any other minority can sometimes just exist. you dont *need* to write "black struggle' stories, i dont *need* to write more coming out stories. we can just make stories, and have the MC be black, or latine, or gay, or in a wheelchair, sure that would impact the character differently but its "A Gay Story", its a story thats also gay you know? To speak on the 'some ppl dont want white writers to write black characters if theyre not to a T" I saw this tumblr post a while ago abt how the difference is that, i for example, am not black and thus should not try to write about a black kid in school and their feelings abt their own identity and navigating their community and how their community interacts with them, basically, The Black Experience, bc i wouldnt know what its like. But if im writing a book, abt like this murder mystery, i can make the MC black without the story revolving around their blackness. Now im speaking abt being black alot but thats because thats the topic of the opinion but it can work in any way, Rick Riordan did it with Nico, Blitz, Alex, Samirah etc as side characters, but Apollo is bisexual and as far as we know rick is straight, Apollo being bi was definitely apart of his character in ToA but the books didnt revolve around apollos bi experience, or realizing hes bi or his trying to come out to zeus or anything like that. That being said i think i should mention that writing books in a post racial society or with no social commentary is fine, but writing something with no BIPOC characters or other minorities is a separate problem, unless there is a specific reason for having an all white book from a poc author (which would seem like some social commentary in itself), there is no reason to devoid the book of diversity, even from just a creative stand point.
@KaliG01
2 жыл бұрын
This was a pretty great video. Lighthearted and genuine 🤗 it’s nice to see something that isn’t saturated with addressing sensitivity-just a nice free discussion 👌🏽
@amandarandomtube4793
2 жыл бұрын
I just wanted to say I definitely feel you on putting young back into YA I really think there needs to be another genre to represent the stuff between Narnia and Nudedity. I'm writing a book now and am getting it to a point of considering how I want to publish it, I feel Trad has a lot of benefits that I would choose, but my book feels like it falls between two markets which I like, but I don't know that a publisher/marketing team would.
@MarysiaKosowski
2 жыл бұрын
In terms of how YA fantasy is written and what audience it's targeting, I actually really miss old-school YA fantasy before YA was even a label: Patricia A. McKillip, Robin McKinley, Meredith Ann Pierce, Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea series...books like those. The aesthetic was different from today's, but to me, a good book is timeless and is never outdated just because 30-50 years have gone by.
@TheRonnieaj
2 жыл бұрын
The sprint one made me laugh so hard! I did one over the weekend, and there wasn’t chatting out loud, but the live chat was HOPPING. I was the one who turned the chat off and just worked 😂. My friend had to recommend a study live stream so I can actually get work done.
@jamescaldwell2357
2 жыл бұрын
I went the NYT bestseller list and compared it to Amazon's bestseller list. The NYT #2 book was listed at #70ish on Amazon. And it only became worse after that. Anyway, good vid Alexa. Super funny, as always!
@blabbinglobster
2 жыл бұрын
I wish more aspiring writers would see writing as a lifetime career. It's about reading constantly, writing as often as possible and getting better with each project, whether it's novels, short stories or poetry. I know of a few self-published writers who literally self-publish the minute they are finished writing what is best described as a first draft. I've struggled to read these "books." I have also seen several respectable agents say not to include self-published works when supplying writing credits. I know many will disagree with me, but I don't consider trad publishing and self-publishing to be the same level of accomplishment. For trad publishing, your work is curated and carefully edited. Your manuscript has been selected from thousands of others. Yes, there are trad pubbed books that disappoint, but when a publisher is placing it's insignia on a book, they are usually putting out something they believe is worthy of a reading audience. Unfortunately, some self-pubbed writers are resistant, even resentful, at the implication that trad and self-publishing are not the same thing, and anyone who says otherwise is being elitist.
@FaithTheFallen
2 жыл бұрын
Hrm, this is a tricky one. There's certainly a lot of less than stellar self-pub. Equally, as the bad sex awards and a bunch of other things point out, there's a whole lot of trad published books that contain howlingly awful stuff. Insignia or not, they are less than stellar. I think self-pub avoids a lot of gatekeeping and 'difficult' books that are not easy to shop, but it certainly doesn't have the same weight behind it or respect from some areas.
@dsa513
2 жыл бұрын
For a beginning writer though it is all about expectations, whether self or externally created. It's no secret that trad pub and self pub are at a more than rhetorical contest. It's a contest about the money. Trad pub is also a 'perennial' fixture in culture. But indy pub is now legit. You don't have to be absolutely rich to publish a book. Just good at the entire process, editing, marketing, managing etc.
@PinkCatsy
2 жыл бұрын
What I will say about the first one is that (1) you never actually know if you're never going to published. You cannot read someone's writing and know whether or not they'll ever get published definitively. (2) "their writing just isn't good enough" - getting published isn't always about good writing. I think that mentality is extremely flawed and as other have said pessimistic. Getting published traditionally is just as much about being marketable as it is about being at least somewhat decent at writing. You can be an amazing writer and not get published (traditionally) because this amazing book is just not what people want to publish at the time for whatever reason.
@aeronduskauthor
2 жыл бұрын
One of the things I love about you and your channel is you are realistic but also encouraging. You're also humble and never come off as an end all be all to writing. While some of these were opinions you didn't agree with, you handled all of this with grace and humor. I have been enjoying your channel for over a year now, and I've learned quite a lot from you. Keep up the great work!
@SensibleSoulHealing
2 жыл бұрын
As for charging for courses- I'm literally a certified teacher for the State I live in. I scored the highest in ELA and Writing licensure tests. Ive taught writing improvement interventions for years. I would still feel like a super imposter if I offered a paid service to help writers become better writers.
@wordswithtaylorleigh
2 жыл бұрын
I'm not going to lie, I saw Lindsay Puckett on the list and was like "NOBODY HAD BETTER SAY ANYTHING NEGATIVE ABOUT HER. SHE IS A PURE SUNSHINE FILLED WITCHY WOO ANGEL AND SHE MUST BE PROTECTED AT ALL COSTS" and then I listened and was much relieved and in agreement that more people should watch her
@nihonarekun
2 жыл бұрын
There is an authortuber i love who i also think writes badly, lol. (I read the beginning of her book on amazon. Shes self published) But i dont care. Its not all about writing, its about how to set up a story and stuff like that, and this authortuber has taught me so much and i love her videos x)
@snipnnip3269
2 жыл бұрын
My next NaNo distraction, wooo! :) love these vids
@radrose4864
2 жыл бұрын
Love these juicy writing drama vids. Your very diplomatic haha
@amylynnsgraphics
Жыл бұрын
YIKES! That first one! I would counter point that, yea, trying to make it your full time paying career as an author, and getting rich and famous, pretty lofty goal, but I'd NEVER discourage someone from writing if that's what they love to do and are passionate about it. I see writing as like art, subjective, people enjoy it, but I suggest getting a full time career as a copywriter/journalist and write as a hobby on your free time, or work a simple job to supplement your income while you write. For me, I have a career that pays well and writing is my hobby and whether people want to read it or not? eh, as long as it's something I'd want to read.
@M.B.23.
Жыл бұрын
On the YA being too juvenile discourse: New Adult is an emerging genre for a reason
@bunbacheso
2 жыл бұрын
I love your writing vlogs! I sometimes listen to them over and over while writing, because they encourage me. But I personally wouldn't say you should do MORE of them, because I've tried and failed multiple times to do writing vlogs, and I think they can be kinda difficult, especially when you feel pressure to update them multiple times a day to get enough content. I like the way you do yours, because you're okay with going a few days without updating. I wouldn't want vlogging to get in the way of your actual writing process, if that makes sense. I think it would be counterproductive to feel like you HAVE to film every single time you're about to write; that is a self-own. Sometimes, I just want to write and am not camera-ready; I doubt I'm the only person who ever has that situation. But I know there are people who vlog every day or almost every day of NaNoWriMo. So I guess vlogging is about balance, and you have to find whatever balance works for YOU.
@socman002
2 жыл бұрын
In response to the first question: It’s so so tough, the competition. So we need to get tough, tougher than the next person. We need to write more, train harder, read more, and persist longer. Every single person that goes on this journey will get their day, but only if they are willing to put in the time an effort. There is no question of will you or will you not make it. You try until death takes you over, and if death takes you over first, that is still honourable. For everyone else who was not met first with death, they will experience their desired success. The world has a way of giving everyone what they deserve no matter how many people strive for it at the same time. How is such a thing possible? The same way rainbows, and full moons, and stars at night and other magical things are. It just happens. But you need to believe. If you’re wasting energy on doubts, then someone who isn’t will surpass you in this competition. Leave realism behind for those who don’t believe in magic, but for those who know that people who are deserving will reap their rewards, the rewards will come. At least that’s what I believe.
@grutarg2938
2 жыл бұрын
Why I, an adult, read children's books (middle grade & YA): A good one is written with careful thought about what they are feeding the brains of their readers. Like a nourishing meal with balanced food groups, lovingly prepared for me and arranged into a fun shape like a bear's face. So many adult books are like "Hey, let's just have 4 glasses of wine for dinner because it's fun" or "Let me feed you rotten food so you can experience throwing up." No thank you! If they were written with the same care, I'd be happy to read a story with more complexity.
@augabachoo
2 жыл бұрын
Unpopular opinion: thriller isn't actually a genre. All thrillers largely fit in as either horror, mystery, action or drama. Thriller is too broad a term to categorize and understand how something will read or feel.
@mariaaguila4113
2 жыл бұрын
Seriously, the serotonin hit when I saw how long this video was 🥰
@Musikchic47
2 жыл бұрын
The Story Genius author was slamming pantsers? That's terrible; whatever you writing style is works for you, you shouldn't slam what others do just because it's not your style.
@jhouserwrites
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah... Pegging the marketing genre sucks. The lowest reviews on my debut seem to not have understood the expectations I set out there, despite the synopsis/blurb. And romantic fantasy and fantasy romance are NOT synonymous.
@TheHerothief
2 жыл бұрын
totally agree with the thriller one! and i agree with you that it happens in adult books. it's very annoying, bc I enjoy thrillers a lot, but I'm not crazy about murder mysteries
@NixLaLoupe
2 жыл бұрын
Hopefully someday I can also obtain a sad cookie.
@AlexaDonne
2 жыл бұрын
They taste like salt because we cry onto them.
@NixLaLoupe
2 жыл бұрын
@@AlexaDonne delicious salt cookies 🤣
@AynneMorison
2 жыл бұрын
I did self publishing first - I'm 63... my nailbiting waiting for a publisher time bank is rather restricked due to my age. I will likely attempt queries as well - I mean, ya gotta walk the path in tandum, if you have that interest.
@JaeAndHolly
2 ай бұрын
Every field is competitive. I'm a photographer and I struggle to find work because there are so many good photographers. I am also a content creator and have had a variety of success with it through my life but it's an incredibly competitive field. Unless you are looking for a standard entry level 9-5 the competition is going to be stiff. You should not discourage someone just because the competition is tough, definitely let them know the reality, but not in a discouraging way. ❤
@victoriapyles7752
2 жыл бұрын
Can I confess that I’ve never read your books? Like your books have been in my TBR pile for like the 2-3 years or whatever that I’ve been watching your videos. But I just seem to fall into this awful cycle of reading one from my TBR pile and then my brain is like “okay, cool, but let’s reread all the Percy Jackson series” and cascades into if you give a mouse a cookie, and then I read all of his books and then I’m burnt out.. and books just keep getting released.. and the pile keeps growing and my brain is like “this makes us anxious.. let’s just ignore the teetering pile and read Percy Jackson again. Percy Jackson is safe.”
@AlexaDonne
2 жыл бұрын
I am a mood reader and I feel that! Never apologize for not having read a book, even by someone you like :) Especially in pandemic times, I have done a lot of comfort reading!
@BeSimplySusan
11 ай бұрын
I'm literally so happy I've found your channel. I could write a book here ;) but I won't. Thank you for your content.
@Sharpclaw2000
2 жыл бұрын
I read one book by a youtubewriter recently and it had high ratings on goodreads, a few of my favorite booktobers gave it sort of high rates... so I was SHOOKETH when I actually read this trainwreck of an unfinished script. And I was sad for weeks! Like I cannot watch that writers channel anymore because I feel so scammed. And YES, this author gives "advice" on a regular basis. And they are popular! But it goes further, I lost my trust in the booktubers that would not tell me the truth about this script. And afterward, when I watch their reviews, I feel a tension there. As if they know they are... pushing it... but they are.... what? Afraid to give a famous youtubewriter a bad review? Even if it is true? - I scanned my booktube channels after this and I discovered which ones was honest and which ones simply would not ever give a bad review. And I unsubbed all the ones that cannot tell the truth, that waste my time, that SCAM me bah! XD also - this bad practice hurts the indie publishing industry. Because yes, this author was indie so like.... gaaaah
@ketrakrelek2347
2 жыл бұрын
lollll that one about reading books for your own age i partially agree because i think if you are a grown adult and you only read kids/ya i find that a little strange but at the same time I don't want to yuck anyone's yum. On the flip side I recently decided to re-read a kids book i still have my childhood copy of (i think it must have been aimed at 8-12yr olds?) and honestly it stood up as really funny and smart. Good books are good regardless i guess?
@Iradeza
2 жыл бұрын
I bought your book because of this channel! Haha. I have The Ivies on my list too, just need to get through some other reads first
@heeyyy1376
2 жыл бұрын
Love your videos! You always make me laugh :) I *know* you don't agree with adding a New Adult genre but that would solve the problem. Alternatively, re-marketing fantasy and sci-fi towards the New Adult readers could help move adutls over to those genres and away from YA. I agree, YA should not be porn with plot like booktok seems to think it should be.
@samanthajungers8442
2 жыл бұрын
Regarding whether or not authortubers write good books, I have read all of your books. I liked them all, but I especially love Brightly Burning and The Ivies. You are a good writer!
@IanSchrauth
2 жыл бұрын
A self publishing opinion I have is that I feel like traditional published authors who are doing anywhere from okay, to mega famous should At least try to self publish one or two books. I feel like a lot of traditionally published authors spit on self publishing, but it has its pros as much as it has its cons.
@jackienicholson2990
2 жыл бұрын
Don't ever doubt yourself or your worth. I read a really good book called Brightly Burning and I gave it 5 stars on Amazon and Book Bud. The world setting is one I would love to revisit often. The characters are loveable, relatable, and well-executed. I only wish I could hate the villains more, but they are adults with a day job to do. The author has such a fresh, new appeal. For me, the book ends quickly, leaving me wanting for another 4 to 5 chapters.
@ThisSecretCat
2 жыл бұрын
I think the Goodreads ratings thing is a little more nuanced. BIPOC writers have said they get slammed on GR because readers may not understand some of the cultural aspects of their books, especially by white readers. There was a Indigenous horror book that came out last year, and one of the top rated reviews from a white person basically said she didn’t understand the cultural stuff and why there was so much basketball in the story, and she gave it one star. If she had done some research, she would have easily found how basketball is a HUGE part of Indigenous culture, at least in the US. BIPOC writers have said to round up on your reviews, because (1) white readers are not the only audience, and (2) BIPOC have more obstacles and more to prove to publishing houses that their stories are marketable.
@FaithTheFallen
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I have seen so much chat about this in the horror genre as well, it's been a known issue for a while. And just targeted review bombing for POC authors.
@Desvelar
2 жыл бұрын
I actually got a lot out of the save the cat stuff as a discovery writer. It was just like a more keeping things in mind for me.
@shaunaisazombie
2 жыл бұрын
I'm a plotter and think that Save the Cat kind of sucks for drafting but REALLY good for editing. Trying to do it before my draft makes me overthink things because there's so much nuance in what scene can be considered what beat and where in the story it can exist. But using it as an editing tool can really, really help create structure if you suffer from, say, a sagging middle or your inciting incident is too weak.
@andeeharry
2 жыл бұрын
12.13: Those agents are all over Twitter recently, and they shitting on everyone. I have been getting DMs from them pretending to be from certain publishing houses when they are just market anylists, and nothing to show on thier feed. Facebook and Twitter is full of them, and often from GoodNovel or something press. Get 5 a day trying to sway me lol. And if I don't accept them, they get very nasty.
@SensibleSoulHealing
2 жыл бұрын
Also, I also want more Alexa Donne Writing vlogs- and more videos. 😂🥰❤
@LeahRummel
2 жыл бұрын
“There are bad writers on authortube” yes just like there’s bad writers off authortube 😂 but anyone can study the craft to become better. Talent obviously gives some people head starts over others, but that’s true in all areas. I feel like that opinion may be salty in terms of “there are bad writers acting like experts” which, valid. But let’s not gatekeep who can and can’t make KZitem videos about something they like 😂 (not towards you, to the commenter)
@grutarg2938
2 жыл бұрын
This is an offshoot of the tired old attitude "Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach." Teaching is actually a difficult and specialized skill. Making a quality KZitem channel that helps inspire & inform writers is a difficult and specialized skill. And sometimes the KZitemrs just write in a genre or style that doesn't suit me the way their channel does, which is totally fair.
@LeahRummel
2 жыл бұрын
@@grutarg2938 Totally agree!
@theweebookseller2388
2 жыл бұрын
Some of these have got me SCREAMING! 😵
@rosalynransawbooks
2 жыл бұрын
tbh i am always confused why lindsay puckett doesn’t have more subscribers, like in my mind she has 50k+ but she randomly doesn’t???
@siocourtois7258
2 жыл бұрын
Here's something that some people may or may not agree with, but....I think some writers are scared of the New Adult genre. Adult and YA have been around for so long, which, obviously, makes them much more appealing to sell under (more buyers who know about them) , so why write a book for a genre that's hardly promoted? The problem with this is that you get books with heavy topics meant for people with more life experience, and because YA is more popular (and usually the characters are TECHNICALLY still young enough to be considered a teen, like eighteen or nineteen) those books end up being targeted toward a younger audience, mistakably. However, YA is meant to target thirteen to seventeen year olds (generally). When books have that kind of content in them, it's hard to find something "clean" enough for young, growing, impressionable children to read. And, yes, teens do deal with some gritty aspects in life (I won't discount that), but I still think kids should be eased into things at a healthy rate if possible; not find smut on the inside of their teenaged fantasy novel randomly. I just feel like those kinds of things should be directed toward the New Adult audience, not YA. If New Adult was promoted more then maybe it would clear up a lot of confusion for a parent as well because I guarantee most parents think they can walk into the YA section, pick up a book, and think it's totally safe for their child to read because it's under that "Teen" sign. It just isn't good marketing and it's a missed opportunity.
@WinterWind
2 жыл бұрын
Or just dump those heavier books into adult. Adult doesn't mean the character has to be married with kids or whatever. We can have college or 20s stories in adult 🤷♀️
@siocourtois7258
2 жыл бұрын
@@WinterWind Definitely an option! New Adult, though, is meant for characters and readers who are from ages nineteen to about twenty-five because that's when you're a newer adult (dealing with college and all that). It's that cluster of age that bridges the gap between what YA is supposed to be with Adult. It just isn't used often enough, in my opinion.
@WinterWind
2 жыл бұрын
@@siocourtois7258 yeah I guess what I'm saying is that if they're resistant to opening a new category then perhaps shifting what they're already publishing and calling it adult when it really is more adult in nature than for kids and teens is what could be done. If the criticism is that YA isn't meeting the level of actual teens but does have an audience then a marketing spin to encourage that audience that adult isn't scary or boring is what's needed. Shifting the readers with the works rather than adding an extra section in a bookstore for people to criticise as either too teeny or too mature
@siocourtois7258
2 жыл бұрын
@@WinterWind That's a really good point. I totally agree. It's something they could do, for sure. And, like you said, it could definitely help make Adult more appealing to some people (myself included haha). Either/or is definitely a better option than it is now.
@Ruse3
2 жыл бұрын
I recently read White Ivy by Susie Yang, which had been billed to me as a thriller, but it was nothing of the sort. It was a fairly slow biographical story of the MC's life. Towards the end there's a thriller-esque incident, and I guess they decided that was enough to give it the thriller label. It was so far off from what I expected. Totally agree that practically any story may be advertised as a thriller for the sales at this point.
@allyh.8066
2 жыл бұрын
10:36 I was so shocked to hear this said out loud. I have felt this for a long time. People should be able to write what interests them, not what they "owe" the public. My main character is a man who is also not black, and I have no desire to include any "strong, black female" messaging in my story. I'm not denying racism (nor am I self-loathing, as goes the usual accusation), but literally anyone can comment on these kinds of issues in their story if they are so inclined. Black people are more than just being black, and blackness tells you nothing about a person's character. Thanks for reading that one, Alexa. :)
@SysterYster
2 жыл бұрын
One should aspire to be the best, but expect setbacks and fails. But if you never try to reach your goals, you never will.
@mbs.writes
2 жыл бұрын
I would like to say, as an observer. I do believe that having an authortube channel could do a lot for book sells. The more followers you have (whether self or trad pub) the more fans you’ll have buying your books. Some of the authortubers I watch have published and I never would have heard of their books if it weren’t for their channel. This coming from someone who doesn’t pay attention to what books are popular, best seller lists, booktok, or booktube, etc. Yes your channel will grow when you get a book deal, but your sells might also grow. Soooo I 50/50 agree with that opinion.
@NewWorld_Designs
5 ай бұрын
I started to audibly react when the thriller/murder mystery topic came up. I wish that murder mystery and thriller were kept separate, I’m a murder mystery lover, and it’s so hard to find a good mystery cause I have to search through a bunch of thrillers to find one.
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