Christian "romance" novels

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So, who will make Christian erotica a new genre? - Perdita ;)

The New Bodice-Rippers Have More God and Less Sex - JOSHUA KURLANTZICK, NY Times, 9.21.2004

DENVER, Sept. 19 - Kristin Billerbeck is smitten with romance. The author of "What a Girl Wants," a new novel about a 31-year-old patent attorney searching for true love, Ms. Billerbeck sought to make the heroine's quest as authentic as possible. "It has to capture all the reality of being single, thinking all the time that you don't necessarily want to be single, and how do you balance that need with your true feelings about each man," she said.

But for Ms. Billerbeck, authenticity also means a heroine who connects not only with a man but with the Lord as well. "The character always has to slow down and hear what God is saying to them," she said last weekend while attending the third annual convention of Christian romance and fiction writers. "I try to present Jesus in a way that shows he's relevant to modern life."

This year's convention, a blend of traditional writing conference and prayer meeting, was packed with aspiring Kristin Billerbecks. The group, called Write From the Heart, was founded by six women five years ago, and today it claims to have more than 600 members. Each day fans, aspiring novelists and published writers - mostly middle-aged women, along with a few men and younger women - gathered in conference rooms to discuss manuscripts, discuss plot arcs, gossip about agents who blew them off and chat up their favorite authors. In private rooms, agents met with promising rookie authors, while editors thumbed through thick files of story proposals.

At workshops, after authors presented their works, conference organizers led group prayers, including one for "Kristin and her writing endeavors," Rachel Hauck, the group's president, said at a mentoring session led by Ms. Billerbeck. In the mornings the group prayed together, asking God to help guide their pens and thoughts. At the conference bookstore, romantic novels shared table space with guides to home schooling. Nearby was a private prayer room for short breaks, and a few writers sang hymns around the hotel piano. "So many people come here to learn to write, and they meet God along the way," said the conference organizer, Brandlyn Collins.

The publishing industry is beginning to pay attention. The Christian Booksellers Association estimates that total sales of Christian fiction have topped $2 billion a year, and the market share of Christian romance has grown 25 percent a year since 2001, the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association reports. As a result editors have begun targeting younger people who enjoy both Christian and romantic fiction. "Twentysomething and 30-something women were a grossly underserved market in Christian books," said Kelly Gallagher, vice president of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association. "There was nothing out there that dealt with the significant, contemporary life issues they face."

Joan Marlow Golan, senior editor at Harlequin, the largest publisher of romantic fiction, foresees an expanding market that will attract more and more young unmarried Christian women. In a recent study of reading habits by the National Endowment for the Arts, observant Christians were the only group of Americans reading more than in the past. To satisfy that demand, several leading publishers, both Christian and secular romance houses, are rolling out what they call "Christian chick lit" lines. These novels typically feature Bridget Jones types looking for the right man, the right chocolate, the right friends - and the right relationship with God.

Last year the Christian publisher Thomas Nelson jumped in with Ms. Billerbeck's novel. Integrity Publishing, another Christian house, released "The Yada Yada Prayer Group,'' a novel by Nada Jackson about the lives and loves of hip Chicago women in a prayer group. The book sold over 75,000 copies in six months and inspired a sequel, "The Yada Yada Prayer Group Gets Down.'' In March the inspirational publisher Zondervan entered the genre with a series featuring a young Christian woman and her wacky circle of friends and family.

In October Harlequin will kick off its new Christian chick-lit line, Steeple Hill Café, with "The Whitney Chronicles,'' the tale of an endearingly neurotic Christian woman trying to deal with her stressed-out coworkers, comfort a friend who has breast cancer, handle her pushy mother's efforts to set her up and keep off pounds through a church diet group. Meanwhile, Whitney must decide among an array of suitors. She turns to God to help divine each man's intentions, and even keeps a daily Bridgetesque diary filled with Biblical passages that reflect her moods. The author, Judy Baer, said she wrote the book four years ago but her agent couldn't sell it. Two-and-half years later, with secular chick lit titles beginning to fly off racks, "The Whitney Chronicles" sold easily.

Ms. Baer, a veteran Christian romance author who says Christianity "is the center of my life," believes the new books differ sharply from more traditional Christian romance. "It's first person - it's about single, younger women making their way in the world, coming of age and dealing with men and the lack of men. It's very real." Ms. Baer is convinced her readers want everything devotees of secular chick lit want. They seek a focus on the heroine and her development, as well as strong female friendships and a voice, she said, "that's witty and sarcastic and warm all at the same time."

Laura Morris, senior product manager in Harlequin's new business development division, said Harlequin planned to publish six Christian chick-lit titles a year under the Steeple Hill imprint. Other publishers are considering what the trade calls widow lit and hen lit, Christian romance novels about widows and older women.

Christian publishers say the books will attract both traditional Christian readers and younger ones who usually shop at nonreligious stores. "My audience is not only going into a Christian book store," Ms. Billerbeck said. "I sell better at Barnes & Noble than at Christian Booksellers Association stores." This may be because the genre is still a bit racy for Christian bookstores - many titles feature hot-pink covers, and Ms. Billerbeck describes her heroine's thong underwear, which apparently shocked some Christian Book Association book buyers.

Still, there's no bed-hopping or other sexual shenanigans. Fans of these books "are looking for something a little more wholesome - they're not looking for just the smutty stuff," Mr. Gallagher said. There is also less emphasis on the kind of over-the-top materialism that delights readers of, say "The Devil Wears Prada." "Chick lit can be all about me, me, me," said Eileen Key, an aspiring author. "The Prada bag, the Lexus, that has to be more balanced with a less materialistic Christ-conscious life."

So what's left without the sex and coveting of clothes? "There's a kind of deliciousness that comes with unfolding a relationship at a leisurely pace," Ms. Baer said. "You extend all the exuberance, the nervousness of folks falling in love."

Those at Write From the Heart certainly agree. When talk at one workshop turned to the kind of man young Christian readers want, one female writer called out "I like Mark Darcys," the shy, courtly, ravishing hero of "Bridget Jones's Diary," a man who takes hundreds of pages to put a move on. Several other writers immediately yelled out: "Don't we all!"
 
perdita said:
So, who will make Christian erotica a new genre? - Perdita ;)


A couple of people here spring to mind. ;)

So what's left without the sex and coveting of clothes? "There's a kind of deliciousness that comes with unfolding a relationship at a leisurely pace," Ms. Baer said. "You extend all the exuberance, the nervousness of folks falling in love."

Hmmm, ok, not very hot and "wankable" though, is it? One bomber alert!

Interesting article, thanks P.

Lou :rose:
 
Whenever you bring religion into a work, be it erotica or otherwise, you are treading a fine line. The potential to alienate or anger readers becomes far greater as religion is such a volitile subject. Yet, religion is a powerful tool in character building and you can say much about a character's outlook and world view, by simply making him/her a practicing member of a religion.

It is difficult to concieve of writing a story about a middle eastern native without at least considering the effects of Islam on his/her world view. Likewise, you would have to work to write a latino without considering the effects of the Roman Catholic church.

In this case however, it dosen't seem to be giving a character a particular religion as much as writing the stories to be aceptable to a particular religious creed. Considering the strictures of that religion, I am blissfull free of any inclination to write the first Christian erotica. In my case I would already be up for buring at the stake by the time I introduced the two main characters :)

-Colly
 
I read a Christian horror novel once, and while it was okay, it was less than it could have been. There are limitations that are just too much when working within certain genres and having a Christian audience in mind.

The whole idea of Christian horror struck me as odd in the first place.
 
Any Christian fiction that comes into my book shop is dumped in the ten pence box.

It doesn't sell there either.

Serious works about religious issues do sell but fiction - no.

Og
 
Well I can see why this stuff would sell. I know several people who would buy Christian romance. I might even read one out of sheer curiosity....though I'm not sure all that talk of thong underwear seems a bit lewd for my liking ;)

No seriously I can understand the need. Christians need passion, love, lust as much as every bugger else it's just most of it has been squeezed and forrced out by zealots over the years. This may only be a small step but it is a step. Maybe, just maybe, some parts are recognising that christians (shock horror) have sex drives too.

oh yes....even the unmarried ones!:eek:
 
What did you think I was going to put in your mouth — a wafer?
perdita said:
. . . "It's first person - it's about single, younger women making their way in the world, coming of age and dealing with men and the lack of men. It's very real....witty and sarcastic and warm all at the same time.". . .
"That is hot ice and wonderous strange snow."


I question whose version of Christian conduct will be the template.

I suppose no coming of age occurs during a rape, or being mistaken in the young man’s sincerely? No one will ever become a single mother — married or unwed — and they would never approve of the ERA or anything else supported by the feminist’s coven of bestial lesbians.


Also — Am I the only one to be irritated by the term “chick-lit” and “hen lit”? I was introduced to Georgette Heyer by a guy, Kathleen E. Woodiwiss too, come to think of it.


Finally, Mark Darcys' (Colin Firth) emergence as the hero in the last ten minutes of Bridget Jones' Diary is satisfactory only after her hour plus obsession with Daniel Cleaver (Hugh Grant) ends when his character is revealed to be a sham.

In the words of an old folk song — “We need a little Jesus to please us, we need a lot of Satan to ease our minds.”
 
Virtual_Burlesque said:
Also — Am I the only one to be irritated by the term “chick-lit” and “hen lit”?
No. No, you're not. I've never heard of War and Peace or The Great Gatsby called dude-lit. Then there are "chick-flicks". Yuk.

MexChick, Perdita
 
Listmania has a list of Guy Books at Amazon

Fight Club
The Godfather
A Clockwork Orange
A New Hope (Star Wars)
Catch 22
Cannery Row


Right away, something struck me as being funny.

These are all books that either are from movies, or novels that have been make into movies.


You don’t think they are trying to tell us that Guys don’t read? :eek:

Edited to make sense! :rolleyes:
 
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perdita said:
No. No, you're not. I've never heard of War and Peace or The Great Gatsby called dude-lit. Then there are "chick-flicks". Yuk.

MexChick, Perdita

I'm another who can't stand that term.

SlutChick, Lou

:p
 
rgraham666 said:
Christian romance strikes me as rather a bit of an oxymoron.
No, romance was created by a Christian culture. Perhaps you meant "Christian smut" as the oxymoron. P. ;)
 
Having just seen The Passion," I'd love to write a Christian SM romance. By 'swounds I would.
 
Okay, you all can hang me out to dry over this post. Just to create the proper emphasis I will capitalize. IF WELL WRITTEN, this could actually be a very good story. You have the angst of what you would like to do versus what you know is “proper.” You have the opportunity for much greater character development, because what character is more rounded that one that gets what he/she wants in one area, but is completely thwarted in another.

Another approach is more of a Hemingway style novel where the characters are “slightly damaged goods.” You see interaction, you see passion, you see an excess or lack of compassion. You have the opportunity for all kinds of levels of hypocrisy, of guilt, of wanton mistakes and penance.

As far as the erotica bent, Perdita, I hope you will remember our thread discussions on flirting, on Film Noir when we talked about the sensuality of a man and a woman who managed to keep all there clothes on. Electricity can be generated between couples without ever even loosening a tie.

I know it’s not stroke. I know it’s not my story to write. But it could be very readable.
 
Fool, glad you've chimed in. I used the word 'smut', not erotica, and I was being flippant.

As for Christian erotica there's plenty of it in the western canon of literature, including the Bible, though it's not what the article was about.

Perdita
 
Christian erotica:

Joseph beget John and John beget Matthew....

So, Samuel lay with Mary and procreated, taking no pleasure from performing the origional sin.
 
For what it's worth, I'm on board with The Fool on this issue.

I also agree with Colly about how we in the US, with our focus on secular tolerance, tend to underestimate the power of religion. IMHO, that keeps getting us in trouble in areas such as the middle east.

All genre and sub-genre titles are marketing tools, not literary designations. That goes for the chick-lit variations and Christian Romance. VB, IMHO, the key word isn't Christian, but Romance. Most romance novels, whatever the sub-genre, don't get into gritty subject matter. Unmarried mothers are there, but the story usually centers around the next man in their life.

As for your question: "...whose version of Christian conduct will be the template." The answer is simple; whoever comes up with the one that sells best. Harlequin ain't the Southern Baptist Printing House.

Rumple Foreskin :cool:
 
Christian romance from what I was taught from the repressed people in church, or Christian romance from the Bible? The latter was actually fairly steamy sometimes.
 
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