Friday, May 17, 2024

What Fiction Writers Want from Fiction Readers

by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD, MFA


Last week, we explored what fiction readers want from fiction writers. This week, we're going to explore what fiction writers want from fiction readers.


As I've often said, writers and readers are two sides of the same coin. We need each other, and without the other, what we do is futile. As a writer, I write for you, my valued reader. As a reader, you read (I hope :)) what I write. We share in a mutually beneficial relationship. 

So, what is it that writers are looking for from readers? Here are a few of my thoughts as a fiction writer. I encourage you—as a reader or a writer—to add your opinions in the comment box below. Thanks. :)

So, fiction writers are looking for:

1. Faithful Fans.
There's nothing that delights a novelist more than readers who become faithful fans of the author's novels. We fiction writers write stories so that you will read them. And when you read them regularly, you encourage us to continue writing stories for you. 

Of course, readers have preferences as to what kinds of stories they like to read. But once you discover an author whose novels you really like, it helps the author greatly for you to support that author on a regular basis. How can you do that? Point 2 answers that question.

2. Honest Book Reviews.
Authors need book reviews in order to help other readers make informed decisions as to what books to buy. 
A short, positive book review goes far in getting an author's book in front of potential buyers. This, in turn, helps an author to pay the bills so that she doesn't have to find a day job and, probably, stop writing. Or at least cut back significantly on her writing.

Good writing is hard work and authors put in long hours writing their novels. For example, I easily spend 30-40 hours or more a week writing and running my writing business. I think you will agree that, like everyone else, an author deserves financial recompense for the hard work. 

3. Word-of-Mouth Recommendations. This one is a biggie. It is one thing for me to tell others about my books. It is quite another for you the reader to tell others about my books. Somehow, people will believe you more than they believe me. When I promote my books, it could come across negatively, as though I am being conceited, prejudiced, or proud. In reality, I simply want to let readers know that I have novels available for sale.

But when you tell a friend or relative about a novel you've enjoyed, your friend or relative is much more likely to trust your opinion than mine.

So, to sum up, three things writers want most from readers are:

1) Faithful Fans
2) Honest Book Reviews
3) Word-of-Mouth Recommendations

By helping your favorite author in this way, you will doing a great service, not only to them but also to readers everywhere.

Now it's your turn: What are some ways that you, as a reader, help the authors whose work you love? Please post your comments in the comment box below. Thank you!

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HUGE SALE!  I've extended my special sale for another week. All of my novels are available in ebook format for only $4.99. That's less than the price of your favorite latte. Don't miss out on this big sale! This is the last time I will be offering it for a good while. So, check out the list below and click on the cover to purchase. You may also wish to purchase some as gifts for the fiction readers in your life. 

Click on the book cover to purchase.

NOTE: The Italian Chronicles is a compilation in a single volume of all three of the following novels in the trilogy: The Madonna of PisanoA Sicilian Farewell, and Return to Bella Terra. So, when you purchase The Italian Chronicles, be aware that you are purchasing all three books in the trilogy. 

Happy Reading!

MaryAnn 


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Copyright 2024 by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD. All Rights Reserved.






Friday, May 10, 2024

What Fiction Readers Want from Fiction Writers

by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD, MFA


Writers of fiction are continually thinking about how they can best serve their readers. One way writers do this is by sending out surveys. 

I recently sent out a survey myself to my newsletter subscribers and was surprised at some of the results.  For example, to my surprise, most of my readers said they prefer historical fiction over contemporary fiction. Most also said they prefer romance and romantic suspense over other genres of fiction. 

My readers' responses were of great help to me. Since I myself love to write romance, especially romantic suspense, I now know that in doing so, I am meeting my readers' literary needs. This makes me happy as an author.

In addition to genre needs, however, readers of fiction are looking for some other very important things as well. Here are a few of them:

1) Choices of format in their reading material.
Readers like to know that a novel comes in print, ebook, and audiobook formats. Audiobooks especially are gaining in popularity at rapid rates. Readers love to "read" books while driving, washing dishes, or exercising, for example. In a world where multi-tasking is the rule, audiobooks have gained a prominent place.

2) Series or stand-alones? Most readers don't care whether a novel is part of a series or a stand-alone. But some readers devour series books only and will closely follow a novelist for the next book in the series. Other readers, on the other hand, prefer stand-alone stories, claiming that subsequent books in a series get "watered down" and are not as interesting as the first book in the series.

3) Good book descriptions (referred to as "metadata"). Fiction readers want to know as
much as they can about a novel before buying it. When an author provides ample information about her book, the reader is better able to make an informed purchasing decision. 

What about you? As a fiction reader, what do you want from fiction writers? Please post your comments in the box below. Thanks! :) 

HUGE SALE!  This week, all of my novels are on sale in ebook format for only $4.99. That's less than the price of your favorite latte. Check the list below and click on the cover to purchase.

Click on the book cover to purchase.

NOTE: The Italian Chronicles is a compilation in a single volume of all three of the following novels in the trilogy: The Madonna of PisanoA Sicilian Farewell, and Return to Bella Terra. So, when you purchase The Italian Chronicles, be aware that you are purchasing all three books in the trilogy. 

Happy Reading!

MaryAnn 


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Copyright 2024 by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD. All Rights Reserved.








Friday, May 3, 2024

The Debate over Romance Fiction

by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD, MFA


During my young-adult years, I recall a huge debate among the literati over the value of romance fiction. Some considered it a valuable genre of literature, while many considered it shallow, frivolous, and even decadent.

The battles between these two camps were quite vocal, with neither side conceding much, if anything, to the other. Moreover, the battle still rages today, although not to as great an extent. One reason is the emergence of Christian fiction.

But more on that later.

So, why were there two such opposite camps regarding romance fiction in the first place? What caused the great divide? 

For one thing, most secular romance fiction focused on the flesh instead of the spirit. Some romance writers appealed to the senses in a way that devalued human beings and made them out to be nothing more than a composite of hormones driven by lust. Much like animals. These writers, in my opinion, had no idea of the true meaning of love. Indeed, they confused lust with love.

But lust is not love. Nor ever will be.

Yet, to tis day, a good deal of secular romance fiction does not reflect, nor comprehend, the true meaning of love and continues to exalt the flesh. Sadly, sex sells.

But in 1979, the true meaning of love began to show up in fiction with the publication of Janette Oke's pivotal novel, Love Comes Softly. Credited with having invented the Christian romance genre of fiction, Oke revolutionized fiction by portraying the Biblical meaning of love, the only meaning of love that aligns with truth.

In her best-selling novel, Oke revealed two important truths:

1. God is the Author of Romance. He wrote the greatest love story of all time. It is found in the Bible, and it is the story of Christ's infinite love for humanity—a love He demonstrated by His death and resurrection. God's love story is called the Divine Romance. It is a love story that will last forever.

2. All authentic human romance is based on God's divine romance. Since all that God created is good, romance is good. And Christian romance fiction seeks to portray the blessings of romance based on God's love. Moreover, Christian romance fiction seeks to point the reader to the Author of Romance, God Himself.

Since God is the Author of Romance, then romance fiction has a very important place in literature. For romance fiction reflects—or should reflect—God's love for man and woman, and man and woman's love for each other. 

What makes Christian romance fiction different from secular romance fiction is precisely this understanding and portrayal of the true meaning of love. Whereas in secular romance fiction, love is usually equated with lust, in Christian romance fiction love is equated with the sacrificial love of Christ that is selfless, not self-serving. In Christian romance fiction, the man and the woman ultimately seek to bless the other more than the self. They are ultimately transformed from selfishness to selflessness.

As with all other fiction, truth must lie at the core of romance fiction in order for it to be great. Romance novels that equate sex with love are missing that core of truth. Certainly sex is a God-given expression of love, but only within the confines of marriage and only if the motive is the well-being of the other person within that marriage.

But the concept of sex-only-in-marriage is taboo in many romance novels today that are not written from a Biblical worldview. The same is true of sex in our culture. Our culture has devalued sex by relegating it to a forbidden place outside of marriage. But sex outside of marriage is not true love. It is lust.

Today, romance fiction remains the most popular form of genre fiction. It has the highest numbers of readers for a reason. The reason is that we all need love. God created us to need love. But He also created us to find that love first and foremost in Him. When we look to Him first to fill our need for love, then we can love another person in a romantic relationship with that same love with which God first loved us.

Nearly 20 years ago, I first recognized God's call on my life to write fiction, including romance fiction. As I began to write stories, I discovered a new joy in writing and an increase in positive feedback from readers, telling me that my stories greatly blessed them.

Imagine my great surprise, then, when a good nonfiction writer friend of mine wrote me a scathing email denouncing my foray into fiction writing. She told me that I was out of God's will, that I was wasting my time writing fiction, and that my extensive, advanced education precluded my writing something so frivolous as novels. She strongly advised me to devote my writing time to more substantial endeavors.

Because I had always valued my friend's professional opinion, I was stunned by her letter, to say the least. But, as always when I am criticized, I went to the Lord and asked Him if my friend spoke truth. The Lord told me that my friend was misled about the value and purpose of fiction. He confirmed that I must continue writing stories, including romance, in order to touch lives for Him.

And so I did. And continue to do. (And, by the way, I forgave my friend. :) )

Jesus is my example. He told stories to teach deep truths. Why? Because while nonfiction appeals to the mind, stories appeal to the heart. And stories alone can touch and transform the heart in a way that nonfiction cannot. This is the reason I write stories. I want the Lord to transform hurting hearts for Him through the stories He gives me to write. 

So, the next time someone tells you that truth-based romance fiction is frivolous, remind him that Jesus told stories filled with the truth of the divine romance, and that His writers, who are made in His image, can reflect that image by stories filled with the truth of the divine romance as well. 

Now it's your turn . . . 

Please share your thoughts on romance fiction in the comment box below. Thank you! :)

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This is the last week to enter my Goodreads Giveaway for the opportunity to win a free ebook copy of my award-winning love story, In Black and White

Enter at the link below and scroll down on the left.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/48655509




You can't win if you don't enter! :)


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My Novel Pick of the Week . . . 

Prodigal Lives by Carol McClain




eBOOK

PRINT

Disclaimer: I am an Amazon Affiliate and earn a small commission from the sale of books.


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Copyright 2024 by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD. All Rights Reserved.

Friday, April 26, 2024

How Fiction Shapes Our World

by Dr. MaryAnn Diorio


April 26, 2024

Dear Fiction Readers,

Last time we discussed the health benefits of reading fiction. If you missed that post, click here. Today we're going to talk about how fiction shapes our world.

Stories matter. Stories help to inform our understanding of our world and our culture. Indeed, some stories reflect our culture, while other stories anticipate a future culture.

Here are some ways in which fiction can shape our personal world:

1__Fiction can offer us new perspectives on old topics. It can help us to sort out moral and ethical issues and provide insight on how to solve the problems in our own lives. 

2__Fiction can teach us about the human experience, thereby promoting empathy for the sufferings of our fellow man. Reading about a character's struggles is second-best to experiencing those struggles ourselves. 

3__Fiction can relieve stress. People who read fiction tend to be more relaxed and capable of coping with tense situations. When people are more relaxed, they make better decisions, decisions that affect our world and our culture. 

4__Fiction stimulates the mind. Readers of fiction show less mental decline in old age than do those who do not read fiction. When our minds are sharp, we are better equipped to view our world with logical clarity and act accordingly in solving societal problems. 

5__Fiction makes people happy. Happy people are much less prone to hurting others through unkindness, abuse, and even violence, thereby creating a cooperative society in which each person is valued.

We may not realize it, but as we read a work of fiction, we are coming face-to-face with the author's worldview. Depending on our level of discernment, that author's worldview is impacting our life in some way.

If the author's worldview is aligned with truth, then the work of fiction we are reading will shape our lives for good. But if the author's worldview is not aligned with truth, then that work of fiction could lead us into deception.

Remember this: You become what you read. Choose to read fiction that will make you a better person. In so doing, you will contributing to shaping our world for good.

Now it's your turn. How has reading fiction shaped your world. Please share your comments in the comment box below.

Until next time, keep reading!

Before you leave, be sure to check out my Goodreads Giveaway. I will be giving away 100 e-book copies of my popular, award-winning novel, IN BLACK AND WHITE.

First Place Winner in Historical Fiction in the 2020 Christian Indie Awards Contest, this novel is the story of a white woman, a black man, and their forbidden love.

Summary:
Can endurance and faith sustain the love between a white woman and a black man threatened by rejection, guilt, and racioal injustice? Can love alone reconcile their starkly different worlds, lighting the way to a bright future together?

When graduate student Tori Pendola, a white American woman, and Jebuni Kalitsi, a Ghanaian exchange student and heir to his tribe's chieftaincy, fall deeply in love, they must face not only their own inner demons of rejection and guilt but also the demons of societal hatred bent on destroying their relationships. Will their love survive the cruel and bitter attacks against them? Or will hatred and prejudice gain the upper hand?

In Black and White is a deeply moving story about the power of God's love to restore all that is broken in our lives.

Here is the link to enter the Giveaway:

ENTER GOODREADS GIVEAWAY HERE!




SPECIAL SALE THIS WEEK ONLY! Miracle in Milan ebook only $2.99!

A young female auditor discovers convincing evidence that the man she loves is an embezzler.


Get your copy here!


While the sale lasts, buy extra copies as gifts for those special fiction readers in your life.






FEATURED BOOK OF THE WEEK . . . 

The Medallion by Cathy Gohlke (Christy Award Winner)

" . . . An illuminating tale of courage, sacrifice, and survival, about two couples whose lives are ravaged by Hitler’s mad war yet eventually redeemed through the fate of one little girl."




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Dr. MaryAnn Diorio holds the PhD in French with a concentration in Comparative Literature from the University of Kansas, the MA in Italian Language & Literature from Middlebury College, and the MFA in Writing Popular Fiction from Seton Hill University. She writes award-winning fiction from a quaint, small town in New Jersey where neighbors still stop to chat while walking their dogs, families and friends still gather on wide, wrap-around porches, and the charming downtown still finds kids licking lollipops and old married folks holding hands. A Jersey girl at heart, MaryAnn loves Jersey diners, Jersey tomatoes, and the Jersey shore. You can learn more about her and her writing at maryanndiorio.com.


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Copyright 2024 by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD. All Rights Reserved.






Friday, April 19, 2024

The Health Benefits of Reading Fiction

 by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD, MFA


It seems as though the world is divided into two camps: 

1) Those who believe that reading fiction is essential to life;

2) Those who believe that reading fiction is frivolous and shallow and serves only as an escape from reality.

To say that I belong to the first camp is quite obvious, since I am not only an avid reader of fiction, but I also write fiction. Plus, I would not have started this blog if I didn't think that reading fiction is absolutely essential to the well-being of readers and writers alike. 

So how does reading fiction benefit you, the reader? Here are some proven reasons:

1) Reading fiction fosters empathy and compassion. If you tend to be on the lower end of the sensitivity spectrum, then reading fiction will help you to relate better to people.  

Recent scientific studies reveal fascinating discoveries on the relationship between reading fiction and developing empathy in real-life relationships. These studies have shown that reading fiction activates the same parts of the brain that are activated in our efforts to understand those with whom we are in relationship. 

Research psychologist Raymond Mar did an analysis of 86 fMRI studies and noticed a significant overlap in the areas of the brain that are used to understand fiction and the areas of the brain that are used to navigate our human relationships.

In his fascinating thesis study titled Exploring the Link between Reading Fiction and Empathy, Mar notes the following: "Exposure to fiction was positively correlated with social support. Exposure to nonfiction, in contrast, was associated with loneliness, and negatively related to social support."

One reason for this development of empathy by reading fiction is that when we read about the situations and feelings of the characters in a novel, it's as if we are feeling those feelings ourselves. Upon scanning the brains of fiction readers, it was discovered that, while reading fiction, their brains responded in nearly the same way as though the readers were actually living the very situations they were reading about. 

2. Reading fiction relieves stress. It puts our brains into a relaxed state in which we can relax and unwind. After only a few minutes of silent reading, our heart rates slow and muscle tension diminishes. 

3. Reading fiction helps us to navigate relationships. Dr. Keith Oatley, professor emeritus of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto, says that "novels, stories and dramas can help us understand the complexities of social life." Indeed!

When we read about characters who apply certain principles to overcome their problems, we learn how to apply those same principles to our own lives to overcome our own problems. As writing coach Lisa Cron so aptly notes, "We don't turn to Story to escape reality; we turn to Story to navigate reality." 

So the next time you are accused of being frivolous and shallow by reading fiction, politely give your accuser these three reasons above that prove reading fiction is good for your health.

One final caveat: While reading fiction is indeed good for your health, the fiction you read must show the triumph of good over evil. In other words, it must align with truth. If it does not align with truth, then, in the long run, it could be more harmful than good. So keep this in mind as you choose what authors and stories to read. 

Now it's your turn. How has reading fiction been beneficial to your well-being? Please share your comments in the comment box below.

Until next time, keep reading!

Before you leave, be sure to check out my Goodreads Giveaway. I will be giving away 100 e-book copies of my popular, award-winning novel, IN BLACK AND WHITE.

First Place Winner in Historical Fiction in the 2020 Christian Indie Awards Contest, this novel is the story of a white woman, a black man, and their forbidden love.

Summary:
Can endurance and faith sustain the love between a white woman and a black man threatened by rejection, guilt, and racioal injustice? Can love alone reconcile their starkly different worlds, lighting the way to a bright future together?

When graduate student Tori Pendola, a white American woman, and Jebuni Kalitsi, a Ghanaian exchange student and heir to his tribe's chieftaincy, fall deeply in love, they must face not only their own inner demons of rejection and guilt but also the demons of societal hatred bent on destroying their relationships. Will their love survive the cruel and bitter attacks against them? Or will hatred and prejudice gain the upper hand?

In Black and White is a deeply moving story about the power of God's love to restore all that is broken in our lives.

Here is the link to enter the Giveaway:

ENTER GOODREADS GIVEAWAY HERE!




My Featured Novel of the Week . . . 

The Legacy of Longdale Manor
by Carrie Turansky



Summary:
Two women—a century apart—embark on a journey to healing, faith, forgiveness, and romance.

In 2012, art historian Gwen Morris travels to England's Lake District to appraise the paintings and antiques of an old family friend, hoping to prove herself to her prestigious grandfather. While at Longdale Manor, she meets David Bradford--the owner's handsome grandson--who is desperate to save the crumbling estate by turning it into a luxury hotel. When Gwen stumbles upon a one-hundred-year-old journal and an intricately carved shepherd's staff similar to one in a photo of her parents, she's left searching for answers.

In 1912, after her father's death, Charlotte Harper uncovers a painful family secret she can only confess to her journal. She and her family travel to the Lake District to stay on a sheep farm, hoping eventually to find a home with Charlotte's grandfather at Longdale Manor, but old wounds and bitter regrets make it a difficult challenge. As Charlotte grows closer to shepherd Ian Storey and rebuilds her shattered faith, she must decide whether she will ever trust in love again.

E-BOOK

PRINT

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Sources cited:

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Mar, Raymond A., Oatley, Keith, and Peterson, Jordan B. "Exploring the link between reading fiction and empathy: Ruling out individual differences and examining outcomes."  

___"Can Fiction Stories Make Us More Empathetic"

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Dr. MaryAnn Diorio holds the PhD in French with a concentration in Comparative Literature from the University of Kansas, the MA in Italian Language & Literature from Middlebury College, and the MFA in Writing Popular Fiction from Seton Hill University. She writes award-winning fiction from a quaint, small town in New Jersey where neighbors still stop to chat while walking their dogs, families and friends still gather on wide, wrap-around porches, and the charming downtown still finds kids licking lollipops and old married folks holding hands. A Jersey girl at heart, MaryAnn loves Jersey diners, Jersey tomatoes, and the Jersey shore. You can learn more about her and her writing at maryanndiorio.com.


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Copyright 2024 by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD. All Rights Reserved.




What Fiction Writers Want from Fiction Readers

by MaryAnn Diorio, PhD, MFA Last week, we explored what fiction readers want from fiction writers. This week, we're going to explore wha...