![]() ![]() This question came up once again over the weekend on a romance writers’ e-mail list of which I’m a member, and I thought I’d share some of my answer with y’all. So I get asked quite often how I was able to not only write both contemporary and historical but get published in both right from the start of my career as a published author. ![]() It’s better that way, we’re told, because it’ll be easier to pitch ourselves to publishers as a single type of writer (a contemporary romance novelist, a historical romance novelist). She should write Amish or romantic suspense. ![]() The general wisdom in the romance end of the publishing industry is that an unproven (i.e., unpublished or debut) author should focus on writing just one thing: she should write either contemporary romance or historical romance. ![]()
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