Which Readers do You Leave Out

A word from our sponsor:

The Breast Form Store Little Imperfections Big Rewards Sale Banner Ad (Save up to 50% off)

The lady has moved from True Romance and into Action. Not everyone is going to be pleased. However if she doesn't put the action into her action story she is going to lose those who would read and or purchase her story. Those who follow her romance stories may or may not like the inclusion of the reality of life, violence, murder, suffering in her story.

"IF" one wishes to appeal to the broadest readership then they must write to include the whole story not truncate parts which don't appeal to a few select readers.

Romeo and Juliet
Romeo met Juliet, they fell in love, had twelve kids. Three of the children died at infants, four died from childhood diseases, five fell into gangs who robbed and murdered and were hanged.
The End

All the pieces which someone might not like reading were left out of the story. No long time love, hot passionate romance. Yuck. No graphic detail of why the seven died. The lost five who associated with the wrong people, gone. End of a story where I hope no one found too much description of what they really didn't care to read. Of course it becomes a Best Seller because no one had to read or skip over any of the parts they didn't like.

Someone pinged me because I don't put PMS in my stories. None of the women I have known ever showed signs of PMS or that time of the month. Except for the Tampax or Kotex in the cabinet as a reminder there was a monthly cycle, it was a non event. Thus my life experience is I don't write about it. However the funniest PMS story I ever read was Nikky Haley the Elf by Miss Finson with lightning, thunder, storm clouds, and rain in the dorm. Even I can appreciate a good PMS story where a female goes ballistic.

Story telling is more kin to real life than most writers realize. I have read comments where readers have criticized The Professor, Morpheus, and many other great authors. I said criticized not made a comment. They didn't like the way the story went. The problem was, those stories weren't wrote for that person or a select few like minded individuals. They were wrote for a broad range of readers who had a wide range of what they liked in a story.

My point is, one can write True Romance for that select readership. I won't be reading the story as my taste doesn't flow in that direction. Whether it is romance, or action, mystery, try to imagine Sherlock Holmes without the details, it is the interlock of setting (scene) dialog, description that defines the story. The same as a good or poor movie.

I wish all our authors successful writing.
always,
Barb

Click Like or Love to appropriately show your appreciation for this post: