I wouldn't exactly call two books of 150K each or three of 100K fast food.
And I notice that there are other threads here on this very site where publishing houses are being taken to task because SFF novels these days are all so long. What happened to the good old days when everything was so much shorter, they say. Remember all the great classics that were under 100,000 words, they ask. It's only authors of very long first novels that I ever hear complain because publishers and the reading public want books to be too short.
But here is the thing that is getting lost here: If your book is good enough, if it likely to appeal to enough readers, then the size won't matter. Look at all the most successful SFF series. But until they read your book and find out, a much greater than average word count may put editors and agents off. So if your book is long, if you really believe that it has to be long, and that dividing it will ruin it (though I suggest you get some knowledgeable betas to read it and help you decide whether that last bit is actually true), then you need to make sure that when you send in your proposal the very next words that an agent or an editor sees in your letter after the word count is spectacularly appealing.
But if you do decide to self publish, so you can bypass the publishers and get to those niche readers, then there are two things you need to keep in mind. Number one is that when you go indie you are going to have an immense amount of competition when it comes to attracting those readers. And number two is that you are going to have to become very good at self promotion, and that begins with writing up a very appealing description of your book to grab their attention. A description very much like the one you would put into a query letter.
Which brings us back to being able to write a first line that really grabs potential readers.
And I notice that there are other threads here on this very site where publishing houses are being taken to task because SFF novels these days are all so long. What happened to the good old days when everything was so much shorter, they say. Remember all the great classics that were under 100,000 words, they ask. It's only authors of very long first novels that I ever hear complain because publishers and the reading public want books to be too short.
But here is the thing that is getting lost here: If your book is good enough, if it likely to appeal to enough readers, then the size won't matter. Look at all the most successful SFF series. But until they read your book and find out, a much greater than average word count may put editors and agents off. So if your book is long, if you really believe that it has to be long, and that dividing it will ruin it (though I suggest you get some knowledgeable betas to read it and help you decide whether that last bit is actually true), then you need to make sure that when you send in your proposal the very next words that an agent or an editor sees in your letter after the word count is spectacularly appealing.
But if you do decide to self publish, so you can bypass the publishers and get to those niche readers, then there are two things you need to keep in mind. Number one is that when you go indie you are going to have an immense amount of competition when it comes to attracting those readers. And number two is that you are going to have to become very good at self promotion, and that begins with writing up a very appealing description of your book to grab their attention. A description very much like the one you would put into a query letter.
Which brings us back to being able to write a first line that really grabs potential readers.