July 1 question – Is there anything you’d like to see changed, added, and/or rearranged about the book publishing industry?

Because I have no opinions about the July question/prompt, I decided to share a question I was asked at a recent writer event: Is every book tailored for a specific audience? For whom do you write, and why did you choose that target audience?

I used to struggle with this question because I didn’t study genre via an MFA. It was hard to pinpoint, since I use elements from a variety of authors that I read and enjoy. The dialogue of Robert B. Parker, the wit and satire of Garrison Keillor, the character development of Debbie Macomber, and the environmental settings of Fannie Flagg. It’s all in my work (though not nearly at their level). never approaching the prose of F. Scott Fitzgerald, the author of my favorite book.

 

 And then, the lightbulb exploded – ta-da! I just want to have fun!

Now I know exactly who my specific audience is: it’s me! Well, people like me, who enjoy “good stories” regardless of genre, often slice of life tales with no more story arc than Reacher. I’m a dedicated observer of others with a catalogue of characters ready to appear. I dig people, and I observe them, closely listening, watching their faces and body language, emoting.

I consider myself a “storyteller” more than a writer or author, and I strive to make every story as compelling as I can.  After 70 years of reading, I’ve acquired a bodacious vocabulary – and I adore metaphors and alliteration. I’m told my stories are entertaining, always humorous, and some weirdness is going on (even when I’m writing the serious stuff…it just creeps in). I’m gifted with an extravagant imagination, and I employ it as I write.

I want my readers to enjoy their reading experience as much as I enjoyed writing it.

For what it’s worth, I’ve decided Pat Jackson-Colando is the writer, based upon my extensive history of writing college course papers and thousands of clinical reports in my career as a speech-language pathologist. PJ Colando is the storyteller. Thus, a writer is formal and rule-governed. Is storyteller more casual and colloquial, as I’ve surmised? In my POV, yes –

PJ Colando

Writer vs storyteller – it’s an artificial dichotomy.