For the past few years, I've been maintaining a list of markets for short crime/mystery fiction for the members of the Short Mystery Fiction Society (obligatory plug: membership is free, and the group is open to writers, readers, editors, and anyone else interested in the form). Several times a month I go hunting for new market opportunities: magazines, websites and anthologies that might be of interest to the writers in our group. This means checking sites like Duotrope and the Submission Grinder, scrolling through social media, doing general Google searches, and so on. New magazines are relatively rare these days, but new anthologies pop up fairly often.
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I'm Stephen King, and you're not. |
And I've noticed something odd– or at least, something I don't quite understand.
Mystery readers can be a fairly rabid bunch, and there are a lot of them. Walk into any bookstore, and the mystery section is likely to be among the largest. So why is it that there seem to be a lot more markets for short fiction in other genres than there are in mystery?
This isn't new; it's something I was aware of even before I started keeping the markets list. I should also say that it's possible I'm just wrong about this. Maybe my perceptions are skewed somehow, or maybe I'm just not good at this kind of searching.
But, man, it certainly seems as though, for every new anthology seeking mystery stories, there are ten seeking fantasy or science fiction and fifteen or so seeking horror. It's the preponderance of horror that I always find especially confusing. Go back to that generic bookstore, and compare the size of the mystery section to the size of the horror section (you can find it by looking for Stephen King and Joe Hill). In pretty much every bookstore I've ever frequented, the mystery section is larger.
So what explains the seemingly much larger number of markets for horror? Logically, it would seems to suggest a similarly larger number of readers, but I don't see much other evidence that this is the case. Maybe it's just the case that there are a lot of horror readers who don't read anything else? Maybe horror readers are more open to short stories, while most mystery readers prefer novels?
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One of the places I dabbled in horror |
I should make it clear that I have nothing against horror fiction. I've dabbled in it myself, and I certainly recognize there's a lot of wonderful writing being produced in the field. My first love will always be crime, though, and I guess the bottom line is that I wish mystery writers had more opportunities to strut our stuff.
So: short column this month. It's February, after all. The main reason it's short is because I don't have an answer to this question, and I'm hoping someone will. What do you think? Are my perceptions of the current market just wrong? If they're not, what explains this?
Or maybe everyone just wants to be Stephen King?
The irony, of course, is that horror fiction has its roots in texts like Dracula and Frankenstein. Mystery fiction, by contrast, looks back to the short stories of writers like Poe and Doyle (yes, this is reductive, and yes, Doyle wrote novels about Holmes, but I think there's pretty general agreement that the stories are better).
Thanks for the information about the Short Mystery Fiction Society. I fear not only are outlets shrinking but that mystery short story fans are concentrated in the upper age brackets. We must hope that with age comes not just wisdom but a new taste for our favorite genre.
ReplyDeleteJoseph, I've noticed the same thing. Sci-fi, horror and supernatural markets seem to outnumber mystery/crime almost exponentially, especially for novellas. I've tried supernatural (ghosts, usually), romance, the occasional erotica, and sci-fi (no westerns, yet), but they all blend with a crime.
ReplyDeleteSome of my favorite crime/mystery markets are either stagnating (Black Cat Mystery Magazine, Sherlock Holmes) or departed (Mystery [Weekly] Magazine), and I don't really feel my stuff is "literary," but I send there in the land of disappearing markets.
I think of some popular novels (few short stories) that were genre-blending in past years, generally sci-fi and mystery, and some of those were time travel, like Time After Time or a couple of others with titles (and authors) I no longer remember.
Guess we have to adapt to the changes like the dinosaurs couldn't...
I recently joined Blue Sky and I swear half the people that show up on my links there are horror writers. I don't read horror. No idea why that is happening...
ReplyDeleteJoe, as a mystery reader long before I became a mystery writer, I have to say I think mystery readers as a group have always been devoted to novels and especially to series, which used to go on forever. If you ask what drew them to crime fiction, most mystery writers will tell you they started in childhood with Nancy Drew and/or the Hardy Boys, if not Sherlock Holmes (who I never noticed wrote stories rather than novels until I joined SMFS), and Agatha Christie. Back when the library was all about books, we went there to get the latest book, ie novel, in each of our favorite series by our favorite authors as soon as it came out. I was never a fan of horror. I still remember nightmare-inducing portions of a horror comic I read at a friend's (my mother wouldn't have them in the house) something like 75 years ago. No thanks!
ReplyDeleteJoe, I've certainly noticed the same (and I cut my teeth as an epic fantasy novelist over 15 years ago with a bestselling series, before switching to crime.) Fantasy and horror appeals to the younger reader. That's what they see on the silver screen. Mystery doesn't travel as well to movies - hasn't the same amount of car crashes. I hear from my readers (classic mystery readers) that short stories don't give them the cerebral challenge that mystery novels do. I found that fascinating - how about you? Do you think this could be it?
ReplyDeleteIt may well be that horror movies outweigh crime movies by a huge percentage these days.
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