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  This week: Men vs WomenEdited by: LJPC - the tortoise   More Newsletters By This Editor
  
 
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 1. About this Newsletter
 2. A Word from our Sponsor
 3. Letter from the Editor
 4. Editor's Picks
 5. A Word from Writing.Com
 6. Ask & Answer
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 | Sage Quotes: 
 “Most writers regard the truth as their most valuable possession, and therefore are most economical in its use.”
 ~ Mark Twain
 
 “And as imagination bodies forth
 The forms of things unknown, the poet’s pen
 Turns them to shapes and gives to airy nothing
 A local habitation and a name.”
 ~ William Shakespeare (from A Midsummer Night’s Dream)
 
 “There’s no such thing as writer’s block. That was invented by people in California who couldn’t write.”
 ~ Terry Pratchett
 
 
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 | Men vs Women
 Sexism in Speculative Fiction Publishing – Is it Real?
 
 I’ve always published my Horror short stories under a man’s name. I’ve felt that men in the industry are taken more seriously than women.
 
 Is sexism in publishing a real thing?
 
 Here are some surprising facts and figures.
 
 
 Top Selling Authors of All Time
 84 authors – (64 men, 20 women)
 
 Author Name                                   Appr. Total Book Sales                        Genre
 
 William Shakespeare	             2 billion - 4 billion                          Plays and poetry
 Agatha Christie                	2 billion - 4 billion                                        Mysteries
 Barbara Cartland              	500 million - 1 billion	                         Romance
 Danielle Steel	                       500 million - 800 million                           Romance
 Harold Robbins                  	750 million - 750 million                          Melodrama
 Georges Simenon                    500 million - 700 million                           Mysteries
 Sidney Sheldon              	         370 million - 600 million                           Melodrama
 Enid Blyton                            	300 million - 600 million                          Children's literature
 Dr. Seuss	                                 100 million - 500 million                           Children's literature
 Gilbert Patten                        	125 million - 500 million                           YA Adventures
 J. K. Rowling	                             350 million - 450 million                           Fantasy
 Leo Tolstoy	                        	413 million                                              Melodrama/Philosophy
 Corin Tellado	                               400 million                                                 Romance
 Jackie Collins	                               250 million - 400 million                    Romance
 Horatio Alger, Jr.                    	200 million - 400 million                  Adventure
 R. L. Stine	                                  100 million - 400 million                 Horror/Comedy
 Dean Koontz                       	        325 million - 400 million                     Horror
 Nora Roberts	                             145 million - 400 million                          Romantic/suspense
 Alexander Pushkin                           357 million                                             Plays, poetry
 Stephen King	                               300 million - 350 million                     Horror
 Louis L'Amour                         	230 million - 330 million                          Western
 Erle Stanley Gardner           	100 million - 325 million                    Mystery
 Jin Yong	                                      100 million - 300 million                          Chinese Wuxia
 Jiro Akagawa	                    	300 million                                                       Mysteries
 Janet Dailey                             	300 million - 300 million                          Romance
 Edgar Wallace	                    	300 million                                                       Mysteries
 Robert Ludlum	                            110 million - 290 million                          Thriller
 James Patterson                    	        150 million - 275 million                          Thriller
 Frédéric Dard	                            200 million - 270 million                          Mysteries
 Jeffrey Archer                       	120 million - 270 million                          Mysteries
 Stan and Jan Berenstain	          200 million - 260 million                          Children's literature
 John Grisham	                            100 million - 250 million                          Thriller
 Zane Grey	                              	250 million                                                       Western
 Irving Wallace	                    	250 million                                                       Thriller
 J. R. R. Tolkien 	                    200 million - 250 million                          Fantasy
 Karl May	                                      100 million - 200 million                          Western
 Mickey Spillane	                            100 million - 200 million                          Mysteries
 C. S. Lewis	                               100 million - 200 million                          Fantasy
 Kyotaro Nishimura                           200 million                                             Mysteries
 Dan Brown	                               200 million - 200 million                          Thriller
 Ann M. Martin	                            172 million - 180 million                          Children's literature
 Ryotaro Shiba	                    	180 million                                                        Historical
 Arthur Hailey	                               150 million - 170 million                          Thriller
 Gérard de Villiers	                    150 million                                                        Mysteries
 Beatrix Potter	                               100 million - 150 million                          Children's literature
 Michael Crichton                    	150 million	                                            Thriller
 Richard Scarry	                            100 million - 150 million                          Children's literature
 Clive Cussler                                  40 million - 150 million                            Adventure
 Alistair MacLean	                              150 million                                             Thriller
 Ken Follett                                           90 million - 150 million                         Thriller
 Astrid Lindgren	                            100 million - 145 million                          Children's literature
 Debbie Macomber	                            60 million - 140 million                       Romance
 Paulo Coelho	                                      92 million - 140 million                         Literary
 Eiji Yoshikawa	                              	120 million                                              Musashi Japanese
 Catherine Cookson	                    100 million - 120 million                          Romance
 Stephenie Meyer	                            100 million - 116 million                          Paranormal/Romance
 Norman Bridwell	                            100 million - 110 million                          Children's literature
 David Baldacci		                              110 million                                                 Thriller
 Roald Dahl                                       	100 million                                               Children's literature
 Evan Hunter                                     	100 million                                                Mysteries
 Andrew Neiderman	                    100 million                                              Horror (ghost writer for V.C. Andrews since 1986)
 Roger Hargreaves	                    100 million                                                  Children's literature
 Anne Rice                                     	75 million - 100 million                    Horror
 Robin Cook                                       	100 million                                                  Thriller
 Wilbur Smith	                                      80 million - 100 million                    Adventure
 Erskine Caldwell                    	80 million - 100 million                          Literature
 Eleanor Hibbert	                            100 million                                                       Romantice/suspense
 Lewis Carroll	                              	100 million                                              Children's literature
 Denise Robins	          	                    100 million                                              Romance
 Cao Xueqin	                              	100 million                                                Chinese literature
 Ian Fleming	                                      100 million                                                Thriller
 Hermann Hesse                             100 million                                                Literature
 Rex Stout                                           	100 million                                                Mystery
 Anne Golon	                                      100 million                                               Adventure/Melodrama
 Frank G. Slaughter                          100 million                                                Historical/Adventure
 Edgar Rice Burroughs	                    100 million                                               Adventure
 John Creasey		                              100 million                                                Thriller
 James Michener                       	100 million                                                Historical
 Yasuo Uchida		                              100 million                                                Mysteries Japanese
 Seiichi Morimura                            100 million                                                Mysteries Japanese
 Mary Higgins Clark                    	100 million                                                Thriller
 Patricia Cornwell                           100 million                                                Thriller
 Tom Clancy	                              	100 million                                                Thriller
 Penny Jordan	                                      90 million                                                 Romance
 
 (from Wikipedia -  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_fiction_authors)
 
 
 “Best” Modern Horror Authors
 29 authors -- (25 men, 4 women)
 
 1 Clive Barker
 2 Ramsay Campbell
 3 Richard Matheson
 4 Stephen King
 5 James Herbert
 6 Richard Laymon
 7 Dean Koontz
 8 Robert McCammon
 9 Peter Straub
 10 Dan Simmons
 11 Robert Block
 12 Shirley Jackson
 13 Graham Masterton
 14 Joe Hill
 15 Jack Ketchum
 16 Bentley Little
 17 Brian Keene
 18 F. Paul Wilson
 19 Joe Lansdale
 20 Bryan Smith
 21 Ray Garton
 22 John Saul
 23 Mark Z. Danielewski
 24 Billie Sue Mosiman
 25 Graham Joyce
 26 Poppy Z. Brite
 27 Bryan Carroll
 28 Christopher Golden
 29 Anne Rice
 (from Ranker.com)
 
 
 There’s a belief in the writing community that women “can’t” write Horror (or Science Fiction) or that the male readers (who buy most of the books) don’t want to read speculative fiction written by women. While it’s true that some female writers have encountered the “Boy’s Club” attitude and misogyny at conferences and speakers panels, it seems that another reason is that fewer women write speculative fiction than men to begin with.
 
 
 Julie Crisp, Editor at TOR Publishing, “Sexism In Genre”
 
 “… every genre publisher in the UK has female commissioning editors and 90% of the genre imprints here are actually run by women. ... The sad fact is, we can't publish what we're not submitted.” 
 TOR Inbox Submissions from                Women           Men
 
 Historical/epic/high-fantasy                       33%              67%
 
 Urban fantasy/paranormal romance       57%              43%
 
 Horror                                                                             17%              83%
 
 Science-fiction                                                        22%              78%
 
 YA                                                                                      68%              32%
 
 Other (difficult to categorise)                  27%              73%
 
 Total                                                                               32%              68%
 
 (from http://www.torbooks.co.uk/blog/2013/07/10/sexism-in-genre-publishing-a-publisher...)
 
 
 So if TOR (and probably most publishers) receive only 17% of Horror submissions from women, no wonder there are few women Horror writers being published.
 
 
 
  Do you buy and read Horror written by women – or do you stick to books by the famous male authors? Do you think men are better Horror writers than women?  
 
 
 Until next time: Let the horror bleed onto the pages with every word!
 
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 | Highlighting Women Horror Writers!   
 
 
 
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 To my delight, some writers took the time to comment on my last newsletter: "Fear the Unseen"
  Thank you!  Comments listed in the order they were received.
 
 
 Vampyr14
  writes: Another great newsletter.  The senses are so important to experiencing things and it's easy to forget one of them when writing… Usually smell. 
 Yes, I always try to make sure my writing smells.
   
 
 
 Quick-Quill
  writes: In the movie SECONDHAND LIONS There is the time when the young boy discovers the lion. Then allows the lion to live in the corn field. When his relatives come to visit the children go into the cornfield. I know something is going to happen. There is that moment when you mind says A lion and an unsuspecting kid with no smarts. You mind will calculate the outcome faster than your eyes will read the words on the page or the movie will play out. That is crafting a scary scene. I wonder what the director thought when he read the screen play? 
 Great point about how our imaginations can run wild! Thanks for writing to the newsletter.
   
 
 
 Osirantinous
  writes: As usual, a great newsletter that makes me think. I'm bad at prioritising showing over telling, and I usually forget the senses; but they're a great way of showing. Especially in horror/scary. And you're right, our imagination is the greatest 'frightener'. I had to stop reading a scary chapter on the train once because I was going home to a dark, empty house and I didn't want my imagination to turn me into a freaked out home-owner checking behind every door and under every bed!! And thanks for mentioning my story too  
 That’s funny!
  Thanks so much for writing to the newsletter. 
 
 
 Phoenix
  writes: You hit the nail on the hand in advocating the use of sensory information. Getting readers to see the images we're crafting with words almost requires using sights, smells, sounds and textures to make it possible to take the words from the page and translate them into something the reader can not only imagine but feel. Great newsletter! 
 Yes, every sense we emphasize lets the reader “feel” they’re actually in the place of the character. Thanks so much for replying to the newsletter.
   
 
 
 drifter46 writes: Senses inspire the imagination and we all know how dangerous that can be.
 
 Yes – nothing’s more powerful than the imagination. Thanks for replying to the newsletter!
   
 
 
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