Below is the letter I'll be sending in a couple of months to the Board of the Romance Writers of America.
Please note: I'm a proud member of the RWA, and this letter should not be read as a criticism of their decision in 2012 to eliminate the NSRE category. They stated then that "It is not within RWA's mission to grant awards to books outside the romance genre", and the organization is entitled to its decisions.
But many of us write books that are WITHIN the romance genre, and I just think there's a better solution.
If you're an RWA member—or a member who left the RWA because of the elimination of the NSRE—and you'd like to add your name to mine on this proposal, please feel free to "sign" in the comments below, with "Member" or "Past Member" written after your name, and I'll be sure to include your "signature" when I send this letter. (If you write under a pen name, just "sign" with that. I'm keeping this informal and friendly).
Thanks.
* * * * *
Dear RWA
Board Members:
RE: RITA® Awards Category Changes – A Proposal
Four years
ago in Anaheim, when it was announced that
the Novel with Strong Romantic Elements category was being eliminated from the
RITA® and Golden Heart® Awards, I felt sad and disappointed—not only for myself
but for the younger authors starting out whose stories, like my own, were never
going to fit neatly into any other category.
The
following year, I wrote to the Board proposing a possible compromise position, which
they discussed and declined.
But because
I’m stubborn, and because I still feel it’s important for our organization to
include and embrace a diversity of voices, I’d like to present the same proposal
to you now:
That the lost
Novel with Strong Romantic Elements category be replaced by the category of Romance with Other Elements.
By our
organization's own definition, every romance novel contains two basic elements:
a central love story and an emotionally-satisfying and optimistic ending. We
further divide our genre into subgenres: currently Contemporary Long,
Contemporary Mid-Length, Contemporary Short, Erotic, Historical Long,
Historical Short, Inspirational, Paranormal, Novella, Romantic Suspense, and Young
Adult, with a RITA® Award category for each subgenre.
This
arrangement works well for stories that keep within one single subgenre, but it
leaves no easy place for books that cross subgenres or multiple subgenres, like
Lauren Willig’s (contemporary/historical), Lynn Kurland’s
(contemporary/historical/paranormal) and my own (contemporary/historical/paranormal/
romantic suspense).
Those of us
who write cross-subgenre romance are currently told to choose one of the subgenres
we’ve crossed and enter our books in that category. And fair enough, in 2014,
when I let my readers select which of the four possible subgenres my novel The
Firebird should be entered in, it did win the RITA® for Paranormal Romance. But
that was a one-off—even my readers were hotly divided on which category it
belonged in, and in most cross-subgenre books, my own included, the balance
between the subgenres doesn’t allow it to tip into any one category.
Imagine you’ve
written a novel in which fifteen chapters out of thirty are set in the
historical period, while the remaining fifteen are in the present day. Both
threads of the story are equally weighted and equally strong, so you flip a
coin (or poll your readers) to decide whether to enter it in the Historical or
Contemporary Romance categories.
Historical
Romance is currently for “novels that are set prior to 1950”. Contemporary
Romance is for “novels that are set after 1950”.
Your coin
flip or reader poll comes up “Historical Romance”.
Your novel
begins in the present day, and stays there for a couple of chapters before
switching to the past, then back again, and so on.
Assuming
the RITA® judges don’t dismiss you out of the gate as being in the wrong
category because your book starts “after 1950”, entering your novel this way is
a lot like entering my cockapoo in the Best Poodle category of a dog show. He’s
fully half poodle, and has a lot of the same physical features as a poodle, but
no reasonable, rule-abiding judge could ever declare him the best example of a
poodle in that dog show. Nor should they. He’s not the Best Poodle. In dog shows, he’d only be judged against
others like him—other crossbreeds.
The original wording of the
Best Novel with Strong Romantic Elements category description (see below) actually stated,
in fact, that it was for novels “not belonging in another category”, and I feel
this is an important catch-basin for us to preserve.
By creating
the category of Romance with Other
Elements, we’d be keeping the place for these cross-subgenre books, as well
as for longer, epic books that might contain two or more romances, and books
that, although they contain the requisite central love story and the
emotionally-satisfying and optimistic ending, may not be shelved in the Romance
section of a bookstore or have “Romance” written on their spine (something we
all know is rarely within the author’s power to decide).
The
difference would be that, just as the word “Romance” would come first in the
name of this new category, all the books entered in it would have to comply
with our mission statement, and be judged first as romances. That means they
would be scored and rated just like all the other books within the RITA competition. And a book that did not contain the central
love story and an HEA or HFN would be marked just the same as any other entry
would, as “Not a Romance”, and disqualified.
I’m
optimistic that, if this difference were to be explained and made clear to our
authors and their publishers, we wouldn’t have the problem that I’m told we’ve
had in past years, with books that don’t have a real love story within them
being entered for the RITA®, wasting everybody’s resources and time.
Here, then,
is how I would propose re-working the former category description and judging guidelines
for Novel with Strong Romantic Elements into a new category of Romance with
Other Elements.
The former description
and guidelines were as follows:
Novel with Strong Romantic Elements
A work of
fiction in which a romance plays a significant part in the story, but other
themes or elements take the plot beyond the traditional romance boundaries.
Judging guidelines: Novels of any tone or style, set in any place or
time are eligible for this category. A romance must be an integral part of the
plot or subplot, and the resolution of the romance is emotionally satisfying
and optimistic.
This is how
I’d personally alter that wording, to create the new category. The text in red
shows altered/inserted words or phrases, with footnotes below to explain each
change:
Since the awards
categories now all share this common header: “All entries must contain a
central love story and the resolution of the romance must be emotionally
satisfying and optimistic”, there’s no need to include that in the individual
guidelines anymore.
Romance with Other Elements
Novels1 A work of fiction
not belonging in another category2 in which a
romance plays a significant part in the story, but other themes or elements
may take the plot beyond the traditional romance boundaries. also be significantly developed. 3
1 Novels: Changed to
conform to the current wording of other category descriptions.
2
Not
belonging in another category: This was in the original description of the former category, and I believe
it is also an important filter.
3 In which
other themes or stories may also be significantly developed: Again, this is a
return to the original wording of the category
description.
So then,
assuming all those changes are made, the new category description and judging
guidelines would read as follows:
Romance with Other
Elements
Novels not
belonging in another category in which other themes or elements may also be
significantly developed.
By putting
the romance first, both in name and in eligibility requirements, I feel these
changes would allow us to restore an important and much-loved category by
bringing it firmly in line with our mission.
I’d like to
respectfully submit this for your consideration and, hopefully, discussion at
your upcoming Board of Directors meeting in San Diego.
Thank you
for your time, and for your work on behalf of myself and all RWA members.
Sincerely,
Susanna Kearsley
(The original wording of the Novel with Strong Romantic Elements category introduced in 2004 was: "A work of fiction not belonging in another category that contains a strong romantic element, such that one or more romances contained in the story form an integral part of the story's structure, but in which other themes or stories may also be significantly developed.")