Early last week, Love Inspired Historical announced that
their line would be closing in June of 2018 after their final contract has been
fulfilled.
This rocked the publishing community that is LIH—and it’s
readers. We’ve seen a lot of shaky foundations in our Christian publishing
world in the last handful of months and to have one of the major publishers of
such a high volume of Christian fiction decide to close one of their branches,
we all felt the guillotine looming that much closer.
This has followed on the heels of Family Christian Stores
shutting their doors—for good.
Harvest House closing down their fiction line, following in
the steps of Abingdon Press, Moody’s River North and B&H.
We’re seeing more and more displaced editors turn to
agenting and more and more of the remaining houses, trimming back on their
acquiring lists and their volume/output.
It’s hard, as a newbie writer to not become discouraged and
wonder if traditional publishing is in the cards for them.
And it’s hard for the published author with the contract in
hand, to wonder if this is the last time this house will publish their book and
when they will get the news that their house is throwing in the towel.
It’s a discouraging business when looked through the lenses
of numbers, production, and opportunity. And it’s easy to get wrapped up in
writing for the market, striving, crunching the numbers and wishing upon a star
that you’ll get that all-elusive publishing contract and keep it.
It’s discouraging to live your dream at times, isn’t it?
Publishing is all about production and in the midst of the
changing landscape, we forget and lose
sight of the fact that we’re dreaming
and driving towards a dream that is too important to give up.
And we absolutely shouldn’t.
You might be shaking your head as to why I’m telling you not to give up.
And here’s why: this dream is bigger than you. It’s bigger
than the changing publishing world. It’s bigger than what feels like one more
damning flaming arrow against the fortress that has always been our beloved
goal.
And it still should be your beloved goal.
Why?
Because God’s idea of this publishing dream for you is not
defined by what publishing is or is not doing at this point. What houses are or
are not publishing fiction. What genres are hot and which ones are ice cold.
What I’m saying to you might seem a stretch and like
irresponsible planning, but I’m here to tell you: if you write for the market
or the remaining publishing houses or any house that decides to make a go of
it, you’ll write without purpose.
Because those opportunities fade. Another writer who’s
better and published more than you will take the spot you’ve been aiming for
and you’ll grow discouraged and beaten down.
Here’s the thing with writing for publishing: trust that God’s
got this. He’s got you and your book—wherever
that leads you. It doesn’t matter what the publishing world is doing around
you, because when the time is right and the story is ready, you’re going to be
published. I promise you that.
Here’s the thing: your dream is God breathed and God doesn’t
follow the rules of publishing. He’s got His own blueprint and it’s a sight
better than anything we strive to create on our own.
So that story you’re writing? Keep at it. It might not be on
your specific timetable or what you
thought were your specific
expectations, but I promise if you surrender this story to God, it’s going to
flourish. And so will you.
Take heart, dear writer. Yes, these are interesting and
uncertain times, but we absolutely and irrevocably serve a certain and true
God.
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3 comments:
Casey, this is scary. I NEVER thought LIH would go down. Now, more than ever, we need to cling to God.
Kathy Bailey
Wonderful words here, Case! Excellent!
Thanks for these words of encouragement, Casey!
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