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- From: tmaddox@netcom.com (Tom Maddox)
- Subject: Re: Work in Progress
- Message-ID: <1992Oct8.071813.11156@netcom.com>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- References: <15850@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Date: Thu, 8 Oct 1992 07:18:13 GMT
- Lines: 45
-
- In article <15850@mindlink.bc.ca> Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca (Crawford Kilian) writes:
- >Actually, you can't afford to write two to three times as much as the finished
- >book will hold...
-
- "You," that is to say I or anyone else, can afford a number of things--
- or not, as the case may be. Which is simply to say that all of us make our
- own, individual deals with the various devils of subsistence, luxury, or
- whatever else we invoke. More simply, some of us can afford or choose to
- afford things that others would find impossible. I belabor this point
- because it is crucial: Crawford has decided what he can and cannot afford,
- as have I--our two reckonings are different.
-
- >Suppose you're writing a novel of 100,000 words. Suppose it take you two hours
- >to write a thousand words of finished text. That mean you'll take 200 hours to
- >complete your ms.
- >
- >A first novel for the paperback mass market will probably earn an advance of
- >$5000. That works out to $25 an hour...not a bad return, but not great. The
- >longer it takes, the more time you spend fussing and revising, the lower your
- >hourly rate.
-
- I can't really believe anyone goes into the fiction writing racket
- for a good hourly wage. If so, he or she should probably rethink the whole
- business and get into another line of work.
-
- >In today's market, Flaubert would have found that le mot juste was worth about
- >2 cents.
-
- A price for everything, a value for nothing--that is commodification
- at work. What millions of readers have found is that Flaubert's efforts are
- worth everything he put into them, but that this worth is not so easily
- quantified.
-
- Contra Mr. Kilian, I would advise writers to write with as much
- precision as you feel necessary, to revise as much as suits you, to write
- whatever ratio of words/published words you need. I personally think we
- (as readers, as writers, as a culture) need more writers willing to put
- an uneconomic effort into their writing and fewer efficient hacks.
-
-
- --
- Tom Maddox
- tmaddox@netcom.com
- "The Reptoids eat humans like we eat chickens."
- Alex Alexander
-