On Reading & Judging

For the past few weeks, in between my writing schedule, I've been reading several books and manuscripts as a judge for various contests. While it has definitely added to my already busy schedule, I have to say I've enjoyed the task. I've been judging contests literally for decades. And boy-oh-boy have things changed in twenty years. Aspiring writers have so many more resources available to them nowadays, and most are wise enough to take advantage of those resources. People have found online critique groups, book "doctors," freelance editors, writers loops that share information, online courses, a plethora of how-to books—and they're using them! Gone are the days (at least in my recent experience) of receiving a manuscript where the entries are barely readable.

The romance market has matured, of course. The demand is greater but with this wider exposure come many more writers aspiring to write for such a popular market. Romance sales hold a huge share of overall book sales, and competition for a spot in the field has only increased—which naturally raises the quality. Editors not only have more to choose from, but they're more demanding and discriminating. They can afford to be, with so many people drawn to writing.

That's all the good news. The bad news is that my foray into judging has been mostly in the secular romance area, and the secular romance market has also developed over the years. What might have been considered racy twenty years ago, even ten, is merely tame these days.

If I've been asked to read something that I normally wouldn't choose for myself, I usually don't refuse to judge it. Only if it contains an aspect that I find blatantly insulting to my faith would I contact the coordinator and ask for the piece to be assigned another judge. But when judging secular writing, I don't refuse to read books that have more graphic sex or violence than I would otherwise choose to read. For one thing, the majority of secular books include these aspects and it's hard to volunteer as a judge without agreeing to read something containing such material. For another, and to me this is the more important argument, my faith is strong enough (and old enough) to read such things without feeling my spirit tugged downward. I judge the book for what it is: all of the entries in this particular contest are required to be a romance. Does the romance work? Is the writing engaging, even if the content isn't something I would normally read? Has the story convinced me that someone looking for this kind of secular book would be satisfied or pleased to read this? Has the writer done the job of telling a compelling, believable story, using all of the elements she's introduced without extraneous scenes, characters or subplots, and populate it with characters that touch the reader in some way?

Which are all, by the way, things I ask myself as I'm writing my own
stories . . .

So now I'm off to do some writing, and then a good deal of reading. This is one of those days when I feel truly blessed to be able to plan my days in such a way!
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Published on January 23, 2012 04:47
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message 1: by Ruth (new)

Ruth What I find interesting is how little graphic sex some secular fiction has, and yet they become bestsellers. A few that come to mind which I've read recently are "Letters From Home," and "Major Pettigrew's Last Stand.


message 2: by Maureen (new)

Maureen Lang I haven't read either of those titles - but when I'm reading bestsellers I always try to pinpoint what it is that's making them sell so well. Sometimes it's just the author's name, and I think readers hope the quality will live up to past titles (doesn't always happen...). But other times there is a "wow" factor that proves word of mouth advertising really does work! I just started the book about Henrietta Lacks (I'm sorry, I can't recall the full title) and it's a subject I wasn't sure I'd like - but it's marvelous! I can see why a lot of book clubs have chosen it.


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