Today, I received an email from agent informing me that my Black Artemis novels Burn and Picture Me Rollin’ are going out of print. Although I saw this coming, it’s no less disheartening. And yet despite the bad news, something inside my soul resonated.
I’m more than an author. Damn it, I’m a writer. I’m truly a fuckin’ writer.
Many thoughts – overwhelmingly negative thoughts – flashed through my head first. Fuck publishing. People getting imprints for trafficking in stereotypes, and I’m going out of print? Just stop writing novels and stick to…
Whoa! Slow your roll, Sof. Stop writing novels?
I can’t even imagine that. Some of the stories inside me – the ones I feel most compelled to tell – are novels. They’re not supposed to be films or plays, at least not in their original incarnations. The novels I write are meant for people who value the intellectual and emotional engagement demanded of literary text, whether that person is the feminist professor who assigns it to her (or his) students to the teenage girl who yearns for a protagonist who is much like herself or someone she loves. These stories were meant to be conveyed with the intimacy that only a book can deliver. That is, experienced one person at a time through words that can be absorbed at a pace the reader sets. A story such as Picture Me Rollin’ is meant to be revisited in an effort to discover layers and nuances. They are meant to be opened and closed, entered and exited, put down and picked up, all to a rhythm that is unique to the person who signed onto the journey, his or her ideals and accomplishments, insecurities and regrets, passions and aspirations, in tow.
So many other things you can do with your eyes closed with much more reward and less frustration, but, no, you won’t pick up your marbles and go home. Dique you can’t do it. Yeah, you’re a writer.
I have known for some time that something needs to change. For example, I certainly need to become a much more effective promoter of my own work. Gripe what you want about what the house won’t do for you, the bottom line is, no one can care about your work more than you. Maybe I should consider self-publishing. Sure, I’ll trade off one set of problems for another, but maybe what I gain will make them worthwhile.
And it can never hurt to do as much as I can to become a better writer. As paradoxical as it may sound, the less the industry values craft, the more imperative it becomes to cultivate it. Don’t ask me to explain that. I can’t. I just instinctively know it to be true and suspect that artists of all stripes will intuitively understand what I mean when I say that.
But not writing the stories that I feel compelled to tell, stories that I know have a broader audience than my sales indicate, stories that I truly believe can do more than provide a few hours of mindless entertainment? Yeah, the idea crossed my mind, but my spirit immediately rejected it. Do you know what that means?
Yup, I’m a writer.
Maybe the trick is to invest in breast implants and make my way through a particular industry on my back, keeping a meticulous diary along the way. No, I just need to fuck one person. Someone strategically placed in the publishing industry, gender, sexual orientation, and marital status be damned. Or I maybe I can spend a few days cranking out something ridiculously commercial, wholly unoriginal and unapologetically salacious and submit it under a pseudonym of nondescript ethnicity. Or better yet, do something incredibly stupid yet public to become famous then hire someone else to write it for me… under my own name, of course.
Nah. Can’t do that shit 'cause I’m really a writer.
If one of my novels had been optioned for film, made a bestseller’s list or received a rave review, I’d probably share that on my blog as most authors would (and should.) I decided to blog about my last two Black Artemis novels going out of print because, while few will admit it, this is the more realistic and common occurrence of being a novelist in the mainstream publishing industry. And oddly enough, the very compulsion to blog about this proves one thing that no one can deny.
For better or worse, richer or poorer, in sickness or in health, I’m a writer.


Salon.com
Comments
well maybe a bit, but Normal yes?
You are in a catch-a-twenty two: you are too sane and stable
to write truly scary weird stuff, and That is what sells right.
You rightly rage about this, imagining doing outrageous things
in order to write about it. No way. You would be so unhappy,
you wouldnt make it out of bed. People who do those things are driven to it. You are not.
You are not driven and tormented and unhappy beyond hope.
Why do you want success so badly? what do you want to prove.
You never mention money, so what is it?
Do you have an idealized view of who and what successful
writers are? and are not?
There are a lot of kooks, sad neurotics and otherwise dysfunctional people in the group.
It was a joy to read your literate, sane, mature piece.
You write well, I truly enjoyed it.
Write more, and take satisfaction in your present
accomplishment! Good luck, and keep asking Why
do I want success, and what will it Not give me anyway.
keep in touch, I enjoy your writing!
argonne
Argonne, if I were writing for the money, I would've quit soon after I started! Storytelling is a form of activism for me, and I find I do it best through writing. Although my work would be considered commercial, it's not without substance. Quite the contrary, I'm on a mission to use popular culture to advance social justice, utilizing entertainment to make people reflect more deeply about issues of race, class, gender, etc. That's pretty ambitious, and it's much easier said than done (hence, my sales figures), but when I succeed, there's no other feeling like it.
I've come to believe that writers don't always choose to write; writing calls them. When so many dream of being published, I do feel blessed to have been given the opportunity to have my work in print. So much though that, despite this setback, I haven't given up on traditional publishing yet.