Source: http://theauthorhour.com/maria-v-snyder/extras.php
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 17:20:09+00:00

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Matthew Peterson: You have a lot of good advice for new writers on your website. What’s something that you think all new writers should know about the publishing industry?
Maria V. Snyder: About the publishing industry... Something I tell all new writers--and this is not something unique--I think is persistence. The publishing industry is very subjective. The editors have their likes and their dislikes. I remember meeting Anne Groell, she was working at Bantam Spectra as an editor, and she told me that she didn’t like omniscient point of view or main characters that were married.
Maria V. Snyder: So you could have a perfectly great omniscient story that’s wonderful, but she’s not going to get it ‘cause she doesn’t like that point of view.
Matthew Peterson: And she didn’t like married people.
Maria V. Snyder: Right, right, which you don’t know this when you’re looking at the guidelines for the publishers. She doesn’t write that in the guidelines; that’s like a personal preference.
Maria V. Snyder: So I think, you know, persistence is key because just because she rejected Poison Study--17 publishers did--you just have to keep sending it out until you’ve hit everybody. And then wait a year or two till all the editors get switched around, because they hop jobs left and right--a lot of them do--and hit the next wave. Hit the junior editors that just got promoted or the assistant editors who are looking for authors of their own.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah, I like that advice. I’ve heard that same thing from several other authors who . . .
Maria V. Snyder: Yeah, I know. It’s not real original, but I think it’s the most important.
Matthew Peterson: So you just never know.
Maria V. Snyder: You don’t know, and that’s the thing with publishing. It’s like a very hit or miss kind of industry. And I think when I first sent Poison Study out, the market wasn’t really going for those . . . I’m calling it like an accessible fantasy versus like a traditional fantasy, ‘cause I don’t spend a lot of time on details. I mean, I have world building, but I don’t have the whole elfin language there for you and all the things. It’s more focused on the characters and action. Action and characters, and I don’t really get into the whole fancy language or any of that stuff.
Maria V. Snyder: So, but I think when I first started sending it out, that’s what they were still looking for: those epic traditional fantasies, but now they’re looking for a more accessible fantasy that has characters that you root for and a fast paced story.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah, and your characters, I mean, you have strong female characters especially, so that really does appeal to a female audience as well. And there’s a lot of romance in your books, but there is also mystery. You don’t know what’s going on: who’s the bad guy?
Matthew Peterson: You’re not 100% sure who the bad guy is.
Maria V. Snyder: Yeah. I can tell . . . when I tell people, I’m like, “It’s like a mix of genres sometimes. There’s fantasy, there’s a little romance, there’s suspense thriller elements, and there’s always like a mystery element.” ‘Cause it has to be, you know, something that they want, something they want to find out or achieve.
Matthew Peterson: Didn’t the first book, Poison Study, didn’t that win an award for the cover?
Maria V. Snyder: The cover art. Yes, it did. Poison Study’s had many covers.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah, I noticed that.
Maria V. Snyder: The second cover, which is on the trade paperback, it was voted “best cover in the paranormal fantasy” category. The book also won the Compton Crook Award, which is the best first novel in the science fiction fantasy genre from Balticon. Baltimore Science Fiction Society voted for that one. So that was fun.
Matthew Peterson: Yeah, I noticed those covers were very interesting. I mean, I saw those covers like in magazines and stuff, ‘cause they were very beautiful. They were very pleasing. And the different variations of them were very interesting too.
Matthew Peterson: And Storm Glass and Sea Glass, both of those came out the same year, right? I mean, just a few months ago, not too long ago.
Maria V. Snyder: They did, which is my . . . I think my readers are shocked!
Maria V. Snyder: Because they’re used to waiting [laughs] at least a year for a book. And Storm Glass came out in April, and then Sea just came out in September.
Maria V. Snyder: So, that is pretty close together. And then my young adult book, my official young adult book, Inside Out, is coming out in April of 2010, so this is really fast for me.
Matthew Peterson: [laughs] People are excited for that. And you also have a couple short stories, don’t you? Like in the Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance and the Eternal Kiss Anthology?
Maria V. Snyder: Right, I do. I do have a short story in each of those. Though I think it’s funny, The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance . . . . the title is a little deceiving because the short story I wrote is pretty much like one of my books. There might be a touch of romance in them, but it’s not the focus of the story.
Maria V. Snyder: Eternal Kiss one, I did a vampire story, which I never thought I’d write about vampires.
Maria V. Snyder: ‘Cause especially now it’s like a real big thing, and so if you write about them, you’re looked at as someone like that’s copying.
Maria V. Snyder: It’s a trend but when Tricia, the editor, asked me to write a vampire story, I’m like, “Well, do they have to be good?” And she said, “No, they can be whatever you want them.” So I made them like a bunch of punks that were evil.
Maria V. Snyder: That story I had a lot of fun with.
Matthew Peterson: Will there be another Glass book?
Maria V. Snyder: Yes, there’s Spy Glass, is coming out in September, next September 2010.
Maria V. Snyder: With... there’s a typo on Sea Glass: it says 2011, but that’s wrong.
Matthew Peterson: That’s wrong. Okay.
Matthew Peterson: Are we going to see Yelena again or is that series done? The Study series, is that one . . .
Maria V. Snyder: Well, I like her as a character and I figure I will eventually go back to her and Valek and all because I look at the books as more series books than like trilogies.
Maria V. Snyder: It’s just usually when I get to the third book I need to move on, ‘cause I need a fresh project.
Maria V. Snyder: But I see myself going back and doing another study book, and I’m also writing a Study, like a short story. I have some free short stories on my website that have characters from the Study world, and right now I have my newsletter subscribers getting chapters of a new short story called Ice Study that has Yelena and Valek.
Maria V. Snyder: I send them to my subscribers first, and then when they get the story then I’ll post it on my website.
Maria V. Snyder: Wow. That’s great!
Matthew Peterson: I took some advice from your newsletter. It’s great, I like it.
Maria V. Snyder: Oh! Great! Great, yeah. I try. It’s a bi-monthly. I used to do it monthly and then I just couldn’t keep up with it, ‘cause it’s time consuming. And then also, you know, you just don’t have much news.
Matthew Peterson: Just trying to come up with something.

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