
Nonsense-Free Kristin The Dog Walker - Why Contemporary Fiction for Men Disappeared
Traditional publishers love to say men don’t read. The truth? Men don’t read the books publishers keep making for them—or rather, NOT making for them.
In this episode, I review The Dog Walker by R.A. Stone, one of the rare contemporary novels actually written with male readers in mind. We talk about why men’s contemporary fiction disappeared, what makes this book work, and why the publishing industry’s insistence that “there’s no market for this” is complete nonsense.
Spoiler: The market exists. Publishers just refuse to serve it.
In This Episode
* Why traditional publishers stopped making books for men
* What contemporary fiction for men actually looks like
* The cover design risk that paid off
* How male friendships are portrayed (and why it matters)
* Why women readers enjoy this book too
* The “it gets good after page 150” problem
* Proof of concept: Yes, men’s contemporary fiction sells
Book & Author Links
The Dog Walker by R.A. Stone
* Amazon: https://amzn.to/4oJkEmM
* Author website: rianstone.com
Kristin’s Links
Services & Content
* Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com
* Newsletter: Fictional Influence on Substack
* YouTube: Nonsense-Free Kristin
Sponsors
ClickUp - Stop juggling sticky notes and random docs. Organize your writing projects, deadlines, and clients in one place. Try it free at try.web.clickup.com/nonsensefree
Timestamps
[00:00] - Do men actually not read anymore?[03:45] - What The Dog Walker is actually about[08:20] - The cover design risk (and why it works)[12:30] - Male relationships done right[18:15] - Why limited physical description works for male readers[23:40] - The frenemy dynamic (yes, men have those too)[28:10] - What women readers get out of this book[32:25] - The “you have to be patient” problem in modern fiction[36:50] - Why this book had to go in the “satire” category[40:15] - Proof of concept: Men’s fiction sells
About This Podcast
Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them.
New episodes weekly.
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