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Posts Tagged ‘romance novel’

Map: Cloudwards.

Using Google searches to analyze which books are most popular in each US state seems about as flaky a brand of research as can be, but it’s kind of fun anyway. I mean: The favorite genre in Texas is fantasy? I need to ponder that for a while.

Kelly Jensen writes at Book Riot, “Are there different preferences for book genres depending on what state you’re in? According to new research from Cloudwards, there are trends in book preferences based on location.

“Utilizing Google Trends data over the last 12 months, Cloudwards explored the most searched genre in each of the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia. All searches were limited to Google Trends ‘Books and Literature’ category, and the researchers used a variety of common genre terms to determine the frequency of interest in them by state. Some of the genre categories were a little unconventional for the average reader –- how do you determine the difference between ‘fiction’ and ‘family’ as terms -– but the major genres were included, including romance, fantasy, mystery, and so forth.

“Romance dominated in terms of genre popularity across the US, with 22 states seeing it as their top searched genre. In terms of geographic region, romance was especially popular in the south, with states like Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia ranking it as their top genre.

“Fiction and poetry tied for next most popular genres, each either nine states reporting it as the most searched genre. The researchers note that these findings aren’t surprising, given that fiction is broad and encompassing. As for poetry, it is likely not surprising to see people looking for more information about poetry; the research here isn’t about poetry being the most read genre, but rather, one of the most researched genres.

“The next most popular genres were fantasy (six states), family (3 states), mystery (1 state), and fantasy (1 state).

“It should come as little surprise there is so much national interest in romance. It is a genre that consistently sells well across all of its subgenres, and in 2023, print romance books sold upwards of 39 million copies. …

“One of the most surprising findings might be that only one state ranked historical fiction as its most popular genre. That state was Massachusetts. It is a perennially popular genre among readers, and it is a genre that has been a long-running staple on best-of and awards lists. …

“The researchers note that their methodology lacks scientific scrutiny but shows a general idea of interest in different reading genres. Among some of the weaknesses of this study are the loosely-defined genres, as well as the lack of nuance when it comes to format of genre. It’s not clear whether or not the researchers looked into genres outside of those which ranked among the top in the US, as there’s no full list of utilized search terms. There is no indication in the research, for example, whether or not science fiction or westerns were researched, and while horror is a mood and not a genre, it is surprising to see zero representation for horror here, either.

“Furthermore, poetry encompasses a wide variety of genres, as it is a format, rather than a genre. It’s also worth wondering where and how graphic novels in their myriad genres fit in with reader popularity.

“If there’s a takeaway, it’s this: no matter how frequently romance novels can be derided or belittled in pop culture, it’s a genre that is thriving, that is growing, and that tops the list of genres readers are interested in in nearly half of the United States.”

This is fun, but I really think that a more useful study would analyze books sales and library book preferences, don’t you?

It’s hard for me to name a book genre that is my favorite. I love fantasy, but I read many more mysteries than fantasies as there are so few good fantasies. I love certain kinds of biography but read more fiction than biography. I live in Massachusetts but hate historical fiction. If asked about your favorite genre, how would you answer?

More at Book Riot, here. See unscientific results for individual states here.

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In the early 1990s, I was a stringer for Harte-Hanks newspapers and was sent to interview a young romance novelist who was living in a small house on the water in Cochituate.

Suzanne Brockmann cheerfully explained about how success in romance writing requires following a formula — what the hero’s character should be, what the heroine should look like, by what page the first love scene should occur. She showed me the manual. It didn’t bother her at all that the books were meant to be read and thrown away.

As someone with occasional literary aspirations on the order of Dickens or Tom Stoppard, I was appalled. Goes to show that snootiness is ignorance.

I kept an eye out for the books. First I spotted Brockmann romances at magazine kiosks. Then I started seeing Brockmann mysteries on racks in every supermarket. Today I read that she is producing a movie — her second. Good girl!

Although the paint-by-numbers approach isn’t for everyone, I’m sure much of her success reflects the aspects of herself that she put into the writing, and in a way I admire her practicality. From a distance, she seems to have made a pretty fun career for herself.

Today’s Boston Globe talks about her latest project, an indie movie called Russian Doll.

“This is the second indie film for best-selling romance author Brockmann, who splits her time between Framingham and Sarasota, Fla. A few years ago, Brockmann, her husband, writer Ed Gaffney, and their son, Jason Gaffney, decided to make the romantic comedy The Perfect Wedding. Brockmann said it became important to her storytelling family to make a movie with gay characters who weren’t struggling to come out of the closet. Jason specifically wanted to see more characters like himself. …

“The family’s new project — a crime story thought up by Ed Gaffney — is about a detective who tries to solve a case while mourning the death of her wife. The starring role went to Brockmann’s daughter, Melanie Brockmann Gaffney, who has an acting background (she once appeared in an educational film series with Sudbury-raised Captain America star Chris Evans).” More at the Globe, here.

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