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Adam's avatar

I've never considered the question, but you might have a point: Many of those novel covers look straight up girly.

Granted, as an English teacher I love reading novels, but I'll explore a classic novel with a plain cover over newer novels with that particular style. The question of marketing may as well be an assumption.

And as a stray thought, I read a lot of science fiction and science fantasy. That section at Barnes and Nobles looks alien compared to the featured sections when you walk in. You'd never ask those questions about Tor Books.

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Shayne Johnson's avatar

I have so many thoughts/opinions. I work as a bookseller in an independent bookstore and speak with many people each week. Hands down, trying to put a good fiction book into the hands of a male reader is the hardest thing to do. Even when I try to hand sell terrific male-centered books, they just don't take the bait too often - books like Nothing To See Here, Valley of Shadows, The Hail Mary Project, etc. I love when I can introduce a new fiction author to a male reader. You emphasised covers, but I think it begins with the YA section. By the time a young man turns 13, there is almost nothing being written for him. There are great wide ranging books and series for middle grade but so little for the boy teen reader. Then they just get out of habit. Easier to play a video game or watch You Tube. There are other factors too of course, but this is definately something I think about a lot.

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