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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!van-bc!sqwest!marcy
- From: marcy@sqwest.wimsey.bc.ca (Marcy Thompson)
- Subject: Re: Publishing Children's Books?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep9.201123.15884@sqwest.wimsey.bc.ca>
- Organization: SoftQuad Inc., Surrey, British Columbia, CANADA
- References: <1992Sep8.032855.20659@bcrka451.bnr.ca> <1992Sep8.093720.26059@reed.edu> <1992Sep9.125736.18573@syma.sussex.ac.uk>
- Date: Wed, 9 Sep 1992 20:11:23 GMT
- Lines: 35
-
- In a recent misc.writing article, mapd1@syma.sussex.ac.uk (Nigel Ling) wrote:
-
- >>
- >>It often seems that writers of children's books aren't taken seriously
- >>as writers--as though it was a step on the way to becoming a "real"
- >>writer. (There's even a branch of feminist theory which argues that
- >>women writers were pushed to write children's fiction because it was
- >>easier to do than "serious" writing.)
- >
- >All you potential children's writers out there might be interested to
- >know that Graham Greene wrote 3 or so children's stories. One is
- >called The Little Red Fire Engine I believe. Now you could never
- >accuse him of not being a serious writer.
-
- This is exactly the sort of thing which irritates me. Why do we have to
- know that Graeme Greene wrote serious adult fiction to call him a
- serious writer? Answer: we don't. The fact that he wrote and published
- 3 children's books, in and of itself, makes him a serious writer.
-
- It's the same for people in all genres who are tired of being told
- that they aren't serious writers because they write (choose one)
- horror/SF/Fantasy/Romance/YA novels/Children's books or whatever.
-
- A serious writer is one who takes her writing seriously.
-
- Mildly related question: is there *any* sort of writing whose practitioners
- *don't* find themselves routinely accused of not being serious?
-
- Marcy (who is relieved she managed to say that without getting
- out the blowtorch)
- --
-
- Marcy Thompson
- SoftQuad (West)
- marcy@sq.com
-