Notes on the Writing Life: publishing

Notes on the Writing Life

Notes on the Writing Life
Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts

Saturday, January 15, 2011

On first being published: pimples at 50 and other salient details from my memory files

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I continue to dig through the layers on my computer. This is like an archaeological dig.

Here's a snip from a letter to my writer's group, written on Thursday, Dec. 22nd of the year I turned 50, so 1994:
I saw my book mentioned in Quill & Quire (the publishers' and librarians' rag) yesterday: so it's true, it's really going to happen. I'm starting to get little notes from here and there, from friends and acquaintances: congrats. That's nice. God, there might even be reviews, interviews. What then?!! The first step my anxiety has taken is to examine my nails, my teeth and my hair. Can I be seen in public? Why, at age 50, do I have pimples? What justice is there in the world?
TMI! I promise that the next bits I share here will have nothing to do with facial blemishes. 

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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Digging into the compost

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Today I took on updating very old Word files on my computer before they became unrecognizable. In the process, I filed each one away, which meant glancing over it first. Then, of course, I got caught up in the web of my own history, finding short stories I'd written years and years ago, letters and diaries.

I've a few to share, but this one comes up first, a bit from a letter (well actually, a fax) written to my publisher in 1995. I'd been thrilled to get my first book—The Many Lives & Secret Sorrows of Josephine B.—but I was a little disconcerted, to say the least, to discover that the first 25 pages was missing from the first copy I took out of the box.

I called my wonderful editor, Iris Tupholme, who told me, with her usual great good humor:
"It is a universal law of publishing that the one flawed book in the print run is sent directly to the author."
Unfortunately, there were more than a few flawed books in the run that year. My poor publisher! Here's from the fax I wrote on July 10, 1995, listing the problems I'd encountered:
the first signature missing (I've seen this twice, once in a bookstore)
glue spilling out the spine onto the pages
end-papers mucked up at the headband
holes through the inside pages (as if the pages had been closed over a bolt or something)
torn inside lining paper
ink smears inside
title on case upside-down
fabric on case torn
fabric on case wrinkled
first (blank) page glued to the inside cover
multiple covers on book (I don't consider this a problem)
This was, I learned in the years since, highly unusual. No doubt that printer was quickly dropped, but these things can (and do) happen. Publishing is manufacturing, with all the problems that can go with it.

Now, of course, I wish I'd kept that first flawed book. Other, non-flawed copies from this first print run can be found on the Net selling anywhere from $50 to $250, signed.

(The image at left is that of a bookseller offering it for $200 U.S. I can't make out what the writing on the right is about.)

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

A book I recommend for any writer

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I'm almost always reading at least one book about writing. (Right now I'm dipping into three.) Recently I read The Forest for the Trees by N.Y. agent Betsy Lerner, and I immediately wanted to send it on to people I knew who were seriously writing, especially those who had yet to publish. This is a very good book to prepare a writer for the world of publishing. It is also a very good book for a published writer. I learned quite a bit from it, and I've been in the publishing world for decades.

Here are some of the quotes I highlighted:
It wasn’t until I began working with writers that I understood Truman Capote’s brilliant assessment of the writer’s dilemma: “When God hands you a gift, he also hands you a whip.”
There is no stage of the writing process that doesn’t challenge every aspect of a writer’s personality.
I promise not to repeat the most common piece of writing advice: Write what you know. As far as I’m concerned, writers have very little choice in what they write.
I like that especially.
For most writers, writing is a love-hate affair.
Sigh...
People who try to figure out what’s hot and recreate it are as close to delusional as you can get. 
Exactly.
There comes a time when you have to let go of the New Yorker fantasy in service of just getting on with it. 
You mean I'm not the only one who had delusions of being published in the New Yorker?
The ambivalent writer confuses procrastination with research.
Ouch!
Writing demands that you keep at bay the demons insisting that you are not worthy or that your ideas are ridiculous or that your command of the language is insufficient. 
This is not always easy to do.

I could go on and on, but I'll end with one more:
...the degree of one’s perseverance is the best predictor of success. 
No truer words.

(Betsy Lerner also has a wonderful website and blog.)

Happy Holidays, all!

♥♥♥
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