See, dcp said it so much more eloquently than I--listen to him.
'Potential'
The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
X-post! Hah! That's what I get for trying to post from my dinky little phone. Too slow.
And enunciate. Makes me crazy when I'm listening to something and they don't speak clearly.
hee! When I happened to glance ahead and saw that paperdol's was the first post behind this post of Jilli's...
does anyone have any advice about reading one's work out loud?
I had assumed paperdol would have excellent advice so
We're reading our work out loud? oh crap.
made my laugh like a very silly person.
Putting rejections in perspective: [link]
Nothing embarrasses a publisher more than the public knowledge that a literary classic or a mega best seller has somehow slipped away. One of them turned down Pearl Buck’s novel “The Good Earth” on the grounds that Americans were “not interested in anything on China.” Another passed on George Orwell’s “Animal Farm,” explaining it was “impossible to sell animal stories in the U.S.A.” (It’s not only publishers: Tony Hillerman was dumped by an agent who urged him to “get rid of all that Indian stuff.”)
The rejection files [from Knopf], which run from the 1940s through the 1970s, include dismissive verdicts on the likes of Jorge Luis Borges (“utterly untranslatable”), Isaac Bashevis Singer (“It’s Poland and the rich Jews again”), Anaïs Nin (“There is no commercial advantage in acquiring her, and, in my opinion, no artistic”), Sylvia Plath (“There certainly isn’t enough genuine talent for us to take notice”) and Jack Kerouac (“His frenetic and scrambling prose perfectly express the feverish travels of the Beat Generation. But is that enough? I don’t think so”). In a two-year stretch beginning in 1955, Knopf turned down manuscripts by Jean-Paul Sartre, Mordecai Richler, and the historians A. J. P. Taylor and Barbara Tuchman, not to mention Vladimir Nabokov’s “Lolita” (too racy) and James Baldwin’s “Giovanni’s Room” (“hopelessly bad”).
Liese, Sarameg, nice. I love the different perspectives.
Joe, day off? I like it. It's a nice window on a moment, with clear movement before and after. The character has a real personality, hard to do in such a short piece.
I can't think of a day off drabble. Maybe it will come to me.
Thanks, Deena. Hard as hell to cut it down to 100, let me tell you.
heaves big sigh of relief
Just heard back from my agent on the partial I sent her of my WIP. She said it was good reading and wanted to know if I had any more ready to show her. Whew!
Woo hoo!