Friday, February 22, 2013

Smut Fiction Tops Bestseller Lists

If you could put lust in a bottle, it might look like a scene from "Twilight": Bella whispering, "I dream about being with you forever" to her vampire love, who responds, "you're ready right now," and then dramatically kisses her neck.
It's the alluring nectar of forbidden love. But before "Twilight" was a blockbuster movie, it was a publishing gold mine, selling a quarter of a billion copies.
"Twilight" even inspired author E.L. James to write "50 Shades of Grey." The kinky juggernaut spawned "50 Shades"-themed bondage classes and single-handedly boosted the book industry. The book series once dominated the number one, two and three spots on the New York Times Bestseller List.
Now there is a new genre merging the "young adult" fan base with "erotic fiction" fans. It's being called "new adult."
And "New adult" authors like Colleen Hoover are getting the rock star treatment. At a recent book-signing at A Real Bookstore in Fairview, Texas, fans drove hundreds of miles for a chance to meet her. A year ago, Hoover was a social worker, raising her three sons with her husband in a single-wide trailer. But sensing talent, Hoover's mother encouraged her to write a book.
"She's always been a good writer," said her mother, Vannoy Fite. "She always made me laugh when she wrote."
Hoover decided to go for it and give the book to her mom for Christmas.

"I finished it in late December and tried to figure it out to give it to her and my sister and some friends who wanted to read it," she said.
So she self-published her novel, "Slammed," a story about love amidst poetry slams, on Amazon Kindle.
"I did try to query agents and I got a lot of rejection letters and about how I should change it to third person and take out the poetry," Hoover said. "The book had already come out and I was getting rejection letters after it hit the New York Times."
That's right. The New York Times. Hoover bypassed publishers and literary agents and made it onto the acclaimed bestseller list five months after it was a Christmas present to her mother. Hoover cleverly gave away free copies of "Slammed" to key influencers and word of mouth ricocheted around the Internet.
"Every day, my sales would just increase by one or two until eventually it hit the top 100," she said.
Elizabeth Chandler, the co-founder of GoodReads.com -- a social media network that allows users to share books they are readings with comments and ratings -- thinks Hoover's story is "indicative of the rise of self-publishing."
"Publishers took notice," Chandler said. "Readers responded and they drove the trend verses the way it used to be."
"New adult" books are a bit like the old Harlequin romances set in modern times, with younger characters, many of whom are in college, coming of age and often exploring their sexuality. Not Pulp Fiction. Think Smut Fiction.http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/emerging-adult-book-genre-puts-smut-fiction-bestseller/story?id=18550587&buffer_share=81e51&utm_source=buffer

No comments:

Post a Comment