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SIA Investigate > Why do authors include "A Novel" in the subtitle?

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message 1: by Marie Silk (new)

Marie Silk | 611 comments I've been curious about this for a while. I heard that writing "A Novel" into the subtitle is sometimes done to set apart a book that might be mistaken for non-fic or another book of the same name, but I just wonder if there are other reasons for adding this or using a subtitle like "An XYZ Novel".


message 2: by Marie Silk (new)

Marie Silk | 611 comments Sorry I have no idea why this is in the SIA investigate folder. I tried to put it in the "covers" folder, doh!


message 3: by Alexis (new)

Alexis | 265 comments I use it as a warning sign. A novel, which means it's not a novella and I add "Adult" cause you know, the amount of lovemaking going on in my stories. Plus, it added a touch of cool to the layout.


message 5: by Annie (new)

Annie Arcane (anniearcane) | 629 comments Alexis wrote: "I use it as a warning sign."

+1

Personally, I don't have anything extra on my cover but I do put "A Novel" or "A Novella" on the inside title page thingymabob. What is this called?? Haha!

Anyhoo, I reckon my book wouldn't be mistaken for non-fiction (nor would yours) so I don't think it's necessary for that particular purpose...

*ponders*

Hugs,
Ann


message 6: by Christina (new)

Christina McMullen (cmcmullen) I put on the inside title page 'a novel by' for some of my books, but I admit my reason for that was purely aesthetic.


message 7: by Justin (new)

Justin (justinbienvenue) | 790 comments At first I didn't get what you meant but you mean the words "A Novel". I never really thought about it but I suppose it's to distinguish the fact that it's not a short story, novel or novelette. Also maybe an author does it for style.


message 8: by Quantum (last edited Dec 20, 2016 06:25PM) (new)

Quantum (quantumkatana) Justin wrote: "Also maybe an author does it for style."

you hit the nail on the head. "novel" carries cultural significance.




message 9: by Marie Silk (new)

Marie Silk | 611 comments Interesting. So one form is setting apart the title "An XYZ Novel", and the other sets apart the author "A Novel by ___"


message 10: by C. (new)

C. Brown | 62 comments I use The Novel because my book, A Cry Among Men, was first a screenplay; my way of differentiating between the two.


message 11: by A.C. (last edited Dec 20, 2016 08:45PM) (new)

A.C. Melody (acmelody) | 40 comments I've also seen and used the "an XYZ Novel" to let readers know at first glance that the book belongs to a series - though in my case, it's Novella.

For just "A Novel" usage, I recently read this great article that gives a variety of reasons: http://annieneugebauer.com/2013/01/14...

I liked the Clarity example she gave: "Eat, Pray, Love" could be mistaken for a Self-Help book! :)


message 12: by Quantum (last edited Dec 20, 2016 09:46PM) (new)

Quantum (quantumkatana) A.C. wrote: "I've also seen and used the "an XYZ Novel" to let readers know at first glance that the book belongs to a series - though in my case, it's Novella.

For just "A Novel" usage, I recently read this ..."
"And, finally, the obvious one. The one that most likely accounts for 80% of current books that say “a novel” on the cover: It’s in style!"
Justin: you're on fire, man.


message 13: by Marie Silk (new)

Marie Silk | 611 comments Thank you for the replies, everyone! Lots of reasons here that I never thought of before :)


message 14: by Dwayne, Head of Lettuce (new)

Dwayne Fry | 4443 comments Mod
Because, growing up I would see all these books in the library or on my dad's book shelf that said "A Novel" after the title and I always thought... some day...

That's really only a small reason I do it. One reason would be that mostly what I publish are short stories. When I do put a novel out, I want to make sure the cover says "novel" on it so people who buy my stories will understand why this one is more expensive than the others.

When I put Rave On out, I wanted the words, "A Magical Musical Novel" on the cover, just to give a hint that this is a fun novel.


message 15: by Zero (new)

Zero | 8 comments I think it's optional

Whether you write it or not
It doesn't matter :)


message 16: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Ambrose | 16 comments You might want to mention the genre upfront. In my case I put 'a coming-of-age novel.'


message 17: by Amanda (new)

Amanda Siegrist (amandasiegrist) | 190 comments I use 'A Novel' but only in my Series books to indicate it's part of a series.


message 18: by Melissa (new)

Melissa Abigail (melissaabigail) | 58 comments I think so as to clarify it's a full-length fiction book. I didn't include it in my subtitle officially but I did put it on my cover. Why? Well, cause everyone else was doing it. A weird reason maybe, but a reason nonetheless. :D


message 19: by Allan (new)

Allan Walsh | 64 comments I put 'A Short Story' on the cover of my short works as I don't want my readers mistakenly thinking they are getting a novel and being disappointed. I want my readers who purchase online and can't physically see the book to know what they are buying.


message 20: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine Myers | 4 comments Hi Allan, that was a great idea and all of my books are short reads.


message 21: by Amie (new)

Amie O'Brien | 280 comments I read that same article by Annie N. when considering if I would add "a novel" to my title this past summer. I read a few others too. Very helpful with a confusing topic.

Ultimately, I decided that I would put it on the title page of the inside of my book only. I mean, I wanted it. I wanted that feeling of Wuthering Heights. But I didn't want it so much that it carry into my actual title listing on Amazon.

I liked the idea of distinguishing it as a work that was sophisticated and more literary. I didn't want readers to assume it's regular historical romance, but that it's character-driven women's fiction that's both romantic and historical. But quite a good percentage of people have pet peeves about the "a novel" trend. They think it's snooty, I guess.

I got to thinking, I love my title, just as it is. It doesn't sound like a cookbook or self-help book. And my cover has a sophisticated look that doesn't come across as sexually-charged. I'm probably okay to let it just speak for itself.


message 22: by Micah (new)

Micah Sisk (micahrsisk) | 1042 comments Allan wrote: "I put 'A Short Story' on the cover of my short works as I don't want my readers mistakenly thinking they are getting a novel and being disappointed. I want my readers who purchase online and can't ..."

Ditto. It's especially important on eBooks. I've not used "A Novel" yet, but make sure to clearly delineate short stories.


message 23: by Micah (new)

Micah Sisk (micahrsisk) | 1042 comments Amie wrote: "I liked the idea of distinguishing it as a work that was sophisticated and more literary. I didn't want readers to assume it's regular historical romance, but that it's character-driven women's fiction that's both romantic and historical. But quite a good percentage of people have pet peeves about the "a novel" trend. They think it's snooty, I guess..."

To Kill a Mockingbird (To Kill a Mockingbird #1) by Harper Lee

"A novel by Harper Lee"

Snooty.... ];P


message 24: by Amie (new)

Amie O'Brien | 280 comments Ha ha! Yeah...When Harper's book says "winner of Pultitzer prize", it can say whatever it wants!

I love that story. My daughter actually played Dill in our local production a couple of years ago. She was soooooo cute as a little boy with cap and suspenders!


message 25: by Dwayne, Head of Lettuce (new)

Dwayne Fry | 4443 comments Mod
Amie wrote: "But quite a good percentage of people have pet peeves about the "a novel" trend. They think it's snooty, I guess. "

No matter what we do, we're stepping on someone's overly sensitive "pet peeve". If someone is not going to read my novel because I put the word "novel" on the cover, fine by me. Seems to me they're the ones being snooty.


message 26: by Dwayne, Head of Lettuce (new)

Dwayne Fry | 4443 comments Mod
Micah wrote: ""A novel by Harper Lee"

Snooty.... ];P
"

I do not know if Harper Lee was snooty or not, but if she was... she had every right to be.


message 27: by Amie (new)

Amie O'Brien | 280 comments I, myself, don't care when they say "a novel" or not. I look for a cover that catches my eye and see if the short description is compelling. That's what I base most of my decision on.

I admit that I used to also look at how many reviews they had, (not so much reading them, but checking the overall tally). But now that I have become an indie author, I am way more brave in picking up a book with few or no reviews. But I never purchase until I'm satisfied with the downloaded sample chapters.

I've learned that a lot of books can be gorgeous on the outside, but not so amazing on the inside. That goes for traditionally published books too!


message 28: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Ambrose | 16 comments The length of an ebook should tell you whether it is a novel, novella or short story. Amazon and other retailers will let you know this in the listing. And you should be able to download a fair chunk of it as as a sample. If the sample turns out to be a couple of pages you probably won't be getting a novel!


message 29: by Amy (new)

Amy Hamilton | 91 comments I'm thinking next time I should include the words "an erotic novel by" on mine because of a 1 star review I got based on the fact it was erotica and therefore not to be recommended. I put it in the erotic section on Amazon-honest.


message 30: by Annie (new)

Annie Arcane (anniearcane) | 629 comments Okay, I changed my mind and put "a novel"/"a novella" on my covers. No reason other than this discussion made me curious and now I just dig how it looks XD

@Miss Amy: I reckon that might help deter "clean" readers. Then again, I've received a few complaints about my hero's...umm...colorful language even though there's an f-bomb in the blurb. Anyhoo, my detective skills suck so I couldn't find your erotica novel to read the review...

*sobs*

Group hugs,
Ann


message 31: by Amy (new)

Amy Hamilton | 91 comments Sounds like a familiar issue. I'm so obscure I can't be found.


message 32: by Angel (last edited Jan 07, 2017 11:12AM) (new)

Angel | 216 comments I've never added it to the title. I let be know from the beginning that I write more than just poetry, short stories and such. I let it be know in my author bio and in several posts in my blog when I have a upcoming release or book I'm working on it's a novel. I also make sure on the disclaimer page it's cited "This is an original work of fiction" or you can put there "This is an original novel of fiction." Plus the genre I set it in "fiction" separates it from "nonfiction."


message 33: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Kuhn (kevinkuhn) | 20 comments For me it was because people could confuse my title - Do You Realize? with a self-help book, so - A Novel - helped to clarify.


message 34: by Allan (new)

Allan Walsh | 64 comments Annie wrote: "Okay, I changed my mind and put "a novel"/"a novella" on my covers. No reason other than this discussion made me curious and now I just dig how it looks XD

@Miss Amy: I reckon that might help dete..."


You'll never going please everyone Annie.


message 35: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Shender | 35 comments I subtitled my novel -- Once There Was Fire -- "A Novel of Old Hawaii" to signal that it was (a) about Hawaii and (2) historical fiction. I think it works for my book. But I doubt if I'd use a similar subtitle in a different fictional context.


message 36: by M.L. (new)

M.L. | 1129 comments I think "A Novel" is to distinguish length of work, but, I like the idea of adding "Novel" "Novella"--a nice touch!


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