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- From: sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com (Fred Welden)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Ethics, publishing and the net
- Message-ID: <By6Av7.8yt@unx.sas.com>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 14:28:18 GMT
- References: <1992Nov15.231107.21506@netcom.com> <1992Nov16.054911.16903@math.ucla.edu> <BxtDF2.yK@unx.sas.com> <1992Nov19.192841.20507@hilbert.cyprs.rain.com>
- Sender: news@unx.sas.com (Noter of Newsworthy Events)
- Organization: Dobonia
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- Originator: sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
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-
- In article <1992Nov19.192841.20507@hilbert.cyprs.rain.com>, jeff@hilbert.cyprs.rain.com (Jeffrey S. Freedman) writes:
- |In article <BxtDF2.yK@unx.sas.com> sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com (Fred Welden) writes:
- |>but the ability to write does not correlate with the ability to get
- |>published. There may be a lower cutoff, a level of quality below which
- |>you cannot hope to be published, but if so it is very low indeed.
- |
- |Ah, there's hope for me yet!
- |
- |But then, what does it take to get published? Must one have a relative who is
- |an editor? Or a body like Madonna's?
-
- There's all kinds of ways to increase your likelihood of getting
- published. Having a relative who's an editor would certainly help.
- Having a body like Madonna's wouldn't unless you were famous for it,
- or were offering it to the editor in question, which might be difficult
- if you're in Oregon and he's in New York. (Editors know better than
- most that photos can lie.) There was a guy in New Orleans who thought
- he'd follow John Kennedy Toole's example (Toole killed himself) and faked
- a suicide attempt when his book was rejected. He got some air play,
- but I don't think he got published.
-
- Sometimes writers hit on a hot topic, or a hot setting. Sometimes they
- attend the right workshops and make the right connections. Mostly, I
- think, they just plain luck out. Submit your manuscript to enough
- editors with dogged enough determination and eventually somebody,
- somewhere, may decide to acquire it. The process is apparently easier
- after that. For one thing, book contracts usually contain a clause
- giving the publisher first refusal on your next book, which means that
- it will at least get read by them promptly.
-
- |I read a book on writing in which the author stated that he received 50
- |rejections before he had his first book published, and that this was an average
- |number. Yet, if each submission took a month, and if there were no
- |simultaneous submissions, it would have taken him over four years before that
- |acceptance came. Am I missing something here?
-
- Nope, I don't think you are. Of course, there ARE simultaneous
- submissions. It's a real good idea to be doing something else while
- you're trying to get published. Write another novel or two, and, of
- course, don't give up your day job.
-
- --
- --Fred, or another blind 8th-century BC | sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
- Hellenic poet of the same name. |
-