In as much as I have never read Fifty Shades of Grey…
by CJ Black
(…and will not but I’m going to comment because I write erotic fiction as well)
How many of my fellow authors, readers and industry
professionals have seen the news that Publisher’s Weekly named EL James the Publishing Person of The Year?
Author Alison Flood explains in her article in The Guardian:
“…Publishers
Weekly said that James had exerted a comparable influence. "Because the
success of the series continues to reverberate throughout the industry in a
number of ways –among other things, the money it's brought in helped boost
print sales in bookstores and turned erotic fiction into a hot category…”
My apologies, but
I’m not seeing it. That is the whole thing about turning erotic fiction into a hot category.
Now some readers
may ask how I can comment on this if I have never read the e-book? Perhaps I
can’t. All I know is I have no interest in reading it and wouldn’t have an
opinion on it either way if it wasn’t for PW stating that this work has a great
impact on the genre of erotic fiction as a whole.
Perhaps I’m
missing something. My sales are decent but I’ve not seen them improve by leaps
and bounds But then again that’s me. Perhaps some of my fellow erotic authors
have? Feel free to comment. So far, the only comments I’ve seen are people
stating how much they hate the book and it’s obvious all other erotic fiction
is just as bad, or how they love the book and it’s obvious all other erotic
fiction doesn’t compare.
If Fifty Shades
has turned erotic fiction into a hot property, why are we not seeing more
articles about other authors besides EL James? Why are we not seeing more
interviews or comments about various erotic fiction authors and their works?
Why are we not hearing from readers? Or for that matter mainstream publishers
or movie producers?
I’m not the only
one who thinks this work does not deserve such accolades. Take a look at the
articles written by Carolyn Kellogg of the LA Times or Christopher Young of The NY Daily News.
It upsets me that
I’m lumped in the same category as Ms. James. I’d like to believe my fellow
authors feel the same. I am a damn excellent author. This is what I do, what I
love. Pretentious? Perhaps. But what would you think if I said, “I don’t feel
I’m a good enough author?” Would you still want to read my work? I do not like
my work being called porn. I do not write porn. My stories have character development,
plot, world-building and everything else that makes a novel. Yes the sex is
there but so are the other building blocks of a good story.
I can honestly
say that everything I have written has come from my own mind and imagination,
with a bit of life and dreams thrown in for good measure. It is not
re-constituted fan-fiction. I don’t care how many changes were made. The work
is not hers. I have fan-fiction written for the manga Fake by Sanami Matoh. That is hers and I would never even dream of
using that work and calling it my own.
My one wish is
that Publisher’s Weekly, Random House, readers and all the others who embraced
this work would realize that Fifty Shades is NOT the be all, end all of erotic
fiction. There are those of us who bust our collective asses to bring the best
work we can to our readers. We do this because we love what we do and we’re
damn good at what we do.
A commenter asked
on one of the articles, what difference does it make who is the Publishing
Person of the Year? Perhaps none to the commenter but it does to me and I feel
safe to say my fellow authors. A second commenter provided the perfect response
that Ms. James was rewarded for profit and not for writing a good story, or any
one of the reasons that Ms. Kellogg listed in her article. It makes a damn big
difference to us authors.
So where are you?
Publisher’s Weekly? Random House? Universal Pictures? We’re here and we’re
waiting for you. No, our work isn’t lacking, no it isn’t poorly written just
because we didn’t sell millions of copies. Ms. James was lucky, that’s all
there was too it. You should know by now that success such as hers is the luck
of the draw. That doesn’t mean the rest of us are poor authors. We are NOT!
If I think of
other things I wish to say, I’ll do a part two and if my fellow writers wish to
add more, feel free. Right now, I’m just here waiting and writing. I’m sure my
fellow authors are waiting with me…
Peace,
CJ Black
I'm looking for
fellow authors and readers who have their own blogs and accept posts from their
fellow authors and readers. I want to re-post my latest concerning the Publisher's
Weekly choice for Publishing Person of the Year. So if you have a blog and you
would like to re-post feel free, or drop me a line and I'll email you the .doc
version. I want as many people as possible to see it. I believe it's important. Just give credit where credit is due. Thanks!
Blog Post: http://cjblacksatin.blogspot.com/2012/12/in-as-much-as-i-have-never-read-fifty.html?zx=77a955e94423af44
Rachel Deahl~
Publisher’s Weekly, Nov 30, 2012: http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/people/article/54956-e-l-james-pw-s-publishing-person-of-the-year.html
Alison Flood~
The Guardian, December 3, 2012
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/dec/03/el-james-publishing-person-of-the-year
Carolyn
Kellogg~ LA Times, November 30, 2012
http://www.latimes.com/features/books/jacketcopy/la-et-jc-pw-names-el-james-person-of-the-year-20121130,0,6233202.story
Christopher
Young~ NY Daily News, November 30, 2012
http://www.nydailynews.com/blogs/pageviews/2012/11/civilization-ends-eljames-named-publishers-weeklys-person-of-the-year
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