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On Writing & Publishing

Why Does It Take So Long?

Posted by Richard Dooling on February 2nd, 2008

NYTimes, Adam PalmerThe hoary old adage is that publishing a book is like giving birth: It takes nine months. Nowadays, we have electronic typesetting, high-speed presses, print-on-demand, and oceans of text gushing through fiberoptic pipes onto computer screens all over the planet.

So why does it still take so long to publish a dead-tree edition?

Writing in Sunday’s New York Times Book Review, Rachel Donadio explains how technology may move at the speed of light, but humans still need nine months to properly prepare, market, and distribute a book: Essay - Waiting For It - New York Times, by Rachel Donadio.

Google Book Search

Posted by Richard Dooling on January 30th, 2008

If you haven’t tried Google Book Search yet, try it out on a few of my books.

White Man's Grave

If you have the time, you can read the whole book online:

Google’s book scanning project is controversial (see, e.g., Google’s Moonshot, by Jeffrey Toobin at The New Yorker), but a quick survey of the titles available shows that most publishers are wisely going along with the plan.

Rejection, Thy Constant Companion

Posted by Richard Dooling on January 20th, 2008

Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm.

–Winston Churchill

RejectedMost writers worry about rejection, not acceptance. Ray Bradbury says that the successful writer has to deal with both: “You have to know how to accept rejection and reject acceptance.”

Several articles on this site (usually in the “For Writers” section) offer advice to aspiring writers who are trying to find agents or publishers. The most common question I’m asked (after “How do I get an agent?”) is : “How many query letters should I send out?” Or, “I found an agent willing to represent me, but she has submitted my manuscript to five (or eight, or twelve) publishers, with no takers. What should I do now?”

Most writers start out asking “Is my writing any good?” but that inevitably leads to the question: “Is it good enough for me to get paid?” Literary agents are pretty good at spotting what sells, or at least what they can sell to an editor at any given time. Good agents know the marketplace. Writers, even working writers, don’t usually know what sells. Writers know how to make interesting sentences, some of which may sell, others not so much.

If you have read my advice to aspiring writers seeking tips on how to get published, then you know that I don’t subscribe to the “you can do it, just keep at it” school of mentoring. Obviously not everyone who wants to write for hire can get paid to write, just as not everyone who wants to get paid for playing baseball succeeds just by trying really hard. It’s true that hard work matters more than talent, which is fairly common, but sometimes hard work alone won’t do it.

Sometimes would-be writers seem to be asking: “How hard should I try?” Answer: Try as hard as you want to try. And don’t be afraid to quit. I’ve quit several times myself, and it always leads to something new and interesting . . . to write about. In my case, at various times, I have sworn off writing and traveled through Africa, gone to law school and become a working lawyer, and learned some computer programming. I wouldn’t trade any of those three endeavors for equal parts of writing time. Maybe I’d feel differently if I pulled down million-dollar book advances, but I doubt it. As Tom Stoppard put it: “Every exit is an entrance somewhere else.”

If you need a push before you can give yourself permission to quit, read Aspiring Writers: The Worst Advice You’ll Ever Read, by Charles Hugh Smith. Disheartening? You bet, but all it says is that if you are in the writing game for money or glory, you’ll probably break your own heart. Better to be in it because you love reading and writing. Sure it’s nice to get published, but then it starts all over again. No sooner do you get published, then you want a New York Times Review, a good one, please. Next, the bestseller list, of course. Annie Lamott talks about this when giving advice to aspiring writers:

Almost every single thing you hope publication will do for you is a fantasy, a hologram - it’s the eagle on your credit card that only seems to soar. What’s real is that if you do your scales every day, if you slowly try harder and harder pieces, if you listen to great musicians play music you love, you’ll get better.

–Anne Lamott, Bird By Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life

Or as Aristotle put it: “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.” Maybe it’s a bad habit? That’s up to you.

Stephen King, On WritingIf you think writing is a waste of time unless you get paid for it, then quit right now. If you intend to write no matter what, then keep writing and keep sending your stuff off to agents, no matter how often it gets rejected. What’s to lose, except pride and postage? Collect rejection slips and be proud of them. (Almost every writer saves them; someday a literary neuro-psychologist probably will explain why.) Getting discouraged is a daily rite of passage. Take a look at Stephen King’s On Writing and his account of how he tossed his first stab at Carrie into the trash. That’s right, he threw it away. And bear in mind, dear reader, these were the days of typewriters, not computers. It was bye-bye one-and-only draft. On trash day, his wife Tabitha salvaged it and convinced Stephen to keep going and finish the thing. (See On Writing, pages 75-77.) When Doubleday bought the manuscript of Carrie for $2,500, the publisher had to send a telegram, because the Kings were living in a trailer and couldn’t afford a phone.

Consider the publishing history of Harry Potter. True, Rowling found an agent on her second try (most unusual, just ask any author), but then the manuscript was rejected by publisher after publisher: “Too strange! Too long for a children’s book! Too unbelievable! Sorcerers? Spells?” Eventually, Bloomsbury, a new publishing house at the time, bought the manuscript for roughly $5,000, and then printed 500 copies for the first run. That’s how high their expectations were.

Just recently, Catherine O’Flynn, 37, joined the likes of H. G. Wells, William Golding, Graham Greene and J. K. Rowling by finding spectacular success after a string of rejections when her mystery story What Was Lost took the First Novel prize at the Costa Book Awards (formerly known as the Whitbread Prize): Rejected author has last laugh. If you seek particulars on how many rejections are “normal” or “enough,” consult the likes of Miss Snark, always funny and a working literary agent with great advice about the marketplace and query letters (although, as of 20 May 2007, her blog appears to have gone dark).

Have a look at today’s New York Times Book Review and The Story of ‘Night’. In the late 1950s, fifteen publishers rejected Elie Wiesel’s account of his time at Auschwitz and Buchenwald, before the small firm Hill & Wang finally accepted it. You can empathize with the editors who rejected it, can’t you? “Oh, here’s a cheery, heart-warming story: ‘My time at Auschwitz.’” As of today, Night has sold 10 million copies, only 3 million of which are due to Oprah’s recent endorsement. The point isn’t that you too can sell 10 million copies of your book. Night could have sold only 5,000 copies, and it would still be a great book. The point is that you can’t steer by what the marketplace seems to think is “good” at any given moment. Editors, agents, and publishers don’t know what readers will want next. They can make educated guesses, but nobody knows until the book comes out.

An old, inside publishing joke sums it up. “We’re publishing ten books next year,” says the publisher to the business reporter, “and two of them will be bestsellers.” The reporter asks, “Which ones are the bestsellers?” The publisher replies, “We don’t know yet.”

Finally, if you get downcast (that would be the status quo), visit Literary Rejections On Display, or consider Hemingway’s enduring observation: “That terrible mood of depression of whether it’s any good or not is what is known as The Artist’s Reward.”

Other than self-discipline, there’s no substitute for finding someone who believes in you besides your lonesome.

My wife made a crucial difference . . . . If she had suggested that the time I spent writing stories . . . in the laundry room of our rented trailer . . . was wasted time, I think a lot of the heart would have gone out of me. . . . Whenever I see a first novel dedicated to a wife (or a husband ), I smile and think, There’s someone who knows. Writing is a lonely job. Having someone who believes in you makes a lot of difference. They don’t have to make speeches. Just believing is usually enough.

–Stephen King, On Writing.

See also, Good Books On Publishing and How To Query A Literary Agent.

Good Books On Publishing

Posted by Richard Dooling on February 8th, 2007

On Writing

Aspiring writers often seek advice about how to find a publisher or a literary agent. Unfortunately, most authors don’t know much about the book business, unless they happen to live and work in the New York publishing world.

For the rest of us, who live in Omaha or Dubuque and don’t know many publishing insiders, the best way to learn about the book business is to read a good book about it. Here are a few links to books about publishing, how to write a query letter or a book proposal, and how to approach a literary or screenwriting agent:

Books About The Publishing Business:

Here are some other good books about what it means to be a writer, how to tell if you might be one of these unfortunate wretches, and above all why you should quit writing immediately if you “kind of like writing,” but are mainly interested in becoming rich or famous:

When professional writers offer advice, it ranges from Samuel Johnson’s famous pronouncement, “No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money,” to Charlotte Bronte’s, “I am going to write because I cannot help it,” to Stephen King’s, “Writing a book is like sailing the Atlantic in a bathtub–plenty of room for self-doubt.”

A writer hoping to make a living in the trade might find a compromise in Mark Twain, who said, “Write without pay until someone offers pay. If nobody offers within three years, the candidate may look upon this as a sign that sawing wood is what he was intended for.”

Twain’s advice may seem harsh, but if you’ve been writing for more than three years with no pay and wonder whether you should keep after it, then try quitting. It’s always sound advice. Even if you can’t quit, while you’re trying you’ll probably stumble into an interesting job that has nothing to do with writing, but is swarming with great stories.

If you try to quit writing, and just can’t stop, then your decision is made: You are a writer, and the only question is whether you’ll ever be paid.

See also, Rejection, Your Constant Companion.

How To Query A Literary Agent

Posted by Richard Dooling on February 7th, 2007

“I loathe writing. On the other hand I’m a great believer in money.”

–S.J. Perelman

How To Query A Literary Agent

Many large publishing houses accept only manuscripts submitted by agents. Many agents aren’t interested in representing unpublished authors. So now what?

If you are an unpublished novelist, don’t bother a literary agent or anyone else in the book business until you have finished writing your novel. Agents and editors work at desks surrounded by stacks of completed manuscripts and are too busy to entertain “ideas” that may one day become books.

Writers of nonfiction who are also experts in their book’s subject may attract an agent by submitting a compelling proposal, outline, and sample chapters. But most editors and agents advise aspiring writers that time spent peddling an unfinished book would be better spent finishing it.

If you have a complete manuscript, you should approach one or more literary agents by writing a query letter; introduce yourself and your book, and ask permission to submit the entire manuscript.

Books About Literary Agents

Most agents belong to the Association of Author Representatives, and their site offers a list of their members and more good advice about how to contact them. You’ll notice that most literary agents don’t include their phone numbers in their contact information — that’s because they hate phone calls from unpublished authors with unfinished books.

The Literary Marketplace also features an online directory of reputable literary agents. The website BookTalk features explicit advice from literary agents.

The Horror Writers Association has a great page devoted to frequently asked questions about literary agents at HWA Agents FAQ. Same goes for The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America site, which features all kinds of advice for new writers.

The Nebraska Center For Writers also has a good collection of links and frequently asked questions for unpublished authors looking for agents.

Nicholas Sparks, the author of The Notebook has a nice site with a page called The Writer’s Corner, with good advice for aspiring authors, including a link to the query letter Sparks used to sell his first novel, The Notebook.

Literary agent, Andrew Zack, has a nice .pdf article-cum-sample-query available on his agency’s website.

It’s possible to find more sample queries in the books recommended above, or by doing a google search on the terms “sample query letters”.

For an entertaining tour of some bad query letters, poke around on Miss Snark, Literary Agent.

Books Are a Hard Sell - washingtonpost.com

Posted by Richard Dooling on January 23rd, 2007

Never mind reading entire books. Who has time for that? Librarians these days are information specialists teaching information literacy.
A Librarian’s Lament: Books Are a Hard Sell - washingtonpost.com

Giving It Away - Forbes.com

Posted by Richard Dooling on December 20th, 2006

creative commonsWe’re used to seeing books on, say, computer programming given away free online, as contributions to the Open Source movement, or as marketing to enhance the author’s stature (or Google rank) just before the publication of his next non-free book.

You don’t see many novelists giving away free electronic access to their works. Cory Doctorow is an exception. “I’ve been giving away my books ever since my first novel came out, and boy has it ever made me a bunch of money,” says Doctorow, in a Forbes special issue on the future of book publishing: Giving It Away - Forbes.com

I also put the entire electronic text of the novel on the Internet under a Creative Commons License that encouraged my readers to copy it far and wide. Within a day, there were 30,000 downloads from my site (and those downloaders were in turn free to make more copies).

–Cory Doctorow, author of Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom

Chris Fehily, author of Visual Quickstart Guides on Python, SQL, Windows XP, and the Microsoft Windows Vista: Visual QuickStart Guide, sent me this story.

Perils Of Plagiarism: Ian McEwan’s Atonement

Posted by Richard Dooling on November 28th, 2006

cutandpasteIan McEwan lifts and modifies a few passages and uses them in his novel, ATONEMENT, and poof! Another literary dust-up, for which he must atone.

Eyebrows Are Raised Over Passages in a Best Seller by Ian McEwan - New York Times

These cautionary tales of unintentional plagiarism seem to recur about once a year, with historians getting the worst of it four years ago (Doris Kearns Goodwin, Stephen Ambrose, David McCullough). Like the historians, McEwan was RESEARCHING (in his case, hospitals and nursing care in wartime Britain). He probably copied some snippets that sounded good, saved them for research and reference purposes, and then, over the course of working on his novel for many months, forgot that those words weren’t his. (He’s 58 years old; if he’s like the rest of us, he probably forgets where he put his feet).

It’s an occupational hazard for modern writers. We spend half the working day on our computers: researching, cutting, pasting, writing, rewriting, blocking, moving passages here and there: It’s easy to forget what’s yours and what’s not, unless you develop a system for keeping the work of others separate from your own.

Word processors and even text editors can be easily configured to highlight text or use different-colored fonts. And writers shouldn’t hesitate to change the font color of imported, borrowed, or copied text to RED, the color of embarrassment!

Old Media and Tom Cruise Should Worry

Posted by Richard Dooling on October 20th, 2006

Hal R. Varian, writing for the New York Times Economic Scene:

“I believe that there will be a flowering of creative, inexpensive and compelling semiprofessional content available via the Internet. This content will occupy more and more of people’s attention, particularly young people.”

“What gets squeezed is the middle. Those actors, writers and directors who do not command the big audiences may well find it hard to compete for attention with the video blogs. True, the videos available there are often sophomoric. But there will always be sophomores to watch them.”

Why Old Media and Tom Cruise Should Worry About Cheaper Technology - New York Times

Writing Hacks, Part 1: Starting - scottberkun.com

Posted by Richard Dooling on September 7th, 2006

Here’s some good advice for overcoming the state of writerly paralysis commonly referred to as “writer’s block.” As Scott Berkun points out, “writer’s block” is a misnomer for attention deficit disorder, laziness, or maybe even fear of writing.

“It’s not the fear of writing that blocks people, it’s fear of not writing well; something quite different. Certainly every writer has moments of paralysis, including myself, but the way out is to properly frame what’s going on, and writer’s block, as commonly misunderstood, is a red herring.”

Writing Hacks, Part 1: Starting - scottberkun.com

Los Angeles Times: A writer unblocked

Posted by Richard Dooling on May 7th, 2006

A Screenwriter Takes To Novel Writing

Wesley Strick is a screenwriter whose credits include “Cape Fear” (1991) and “Return to Paradise” (1998). His first novel, “Out There in the Dark,” was published this year by St. Martin’s Press.

A few years ago, I called the guy at my agent’s office who handles book projects to say I was taking a break from writing movies to try my hand at a novel. “When you’re done, I’ll send it to New York,” he replied, “but probably under a false name. Publishers don’t think highly of screenwriters.”

As for what Hollywood thinks of novelists, it’s simple: Books are things to be adapted. You’ve seen the Oscar category: best adapted screenplay. And “adapt” means (look it up) to change or modify — words to give a prose writer pause unless, of course, that prose writer wants to change or modify his bank account balance. Having signed both book contracts and movie contracts, I can confirm there are more zeros in the latter.

A few more differences . . . Los Angeles Times: A writer unblocked

Michiko Kakutani By Ben Yagoda

Posted by Richard Dooling on April 11th, 2006

Many authors fear Michiko Kakutani, book critic for the daily edition of The New York Times, because if she doesn’t like your book she can make you wish you’d gone into the heating and air conditioning business.

Slate’s Ben Yagoda takes a more balanced view and assesses her twenty-five years of reviewing books at The New York Times, in Michiko Kakutani: A Critic With A Fixation.

Many illustrious authors have butted heads with Ms. Kakutani. When she interviewed Gore Vidal for The New York Times, they had the following exchange:

Michiko Kakutani: First question, ‘You hate the American people, don’t you?’

Gore Vidal: ‘No I hate The New York Times. They are not, you’ll be amazed to learn, the same.’

Sample the meta-fallout on the Slate piece in: Turning Scrutiny Back Onto The Critic,” compiled by Adam Christian.

Given the plummeting sales of hardcover literary fiction, this might be one of those academic controversies that is so bitter because so little is at stake. Don’t these people realize that everyone under thirty is over on MySpace.com and YouTube uploading videos of themselves?

Plagiarism?

Posted by Richard Dooling on March 7th, 2006

Albert Einstein said, “The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.”

In Plagiary, It’s Crawling All Over Me, Joseph Epstein examines “the blurry line between a paraphrase and a lift.”

Would My Book Make A Good Movie?

Posted by Richard Dooling on February 23rd, 2006

Books and movies are two different languages. To compare the two is like comparing pottery and stained glass.

–Russel Banks

Probably half the movies made in Hollywood are adaptations of stories that originally appeared as novels, nonfiction books, comic books, short stories, plays, poems, or what have you. Hollywood studios and production companies aggressively scan major magazines and the lists of New York publishers looking for books and stories that would make good feature films or television shows. If Random House or Harper Collins or some other “major” house published your book, chances are that a professional “reader” has already read your book and written a short memo (called “coverage”) assessing its movie potential. (Scott the Reader and screenwriter, John August, both have entertaining descriptions of their careers as “readers” in Hollywood.)

If your book was self-published, or published by a smaller press or University press, it’s less likely that a Hollywood “reader” has assessed its movie potential. Hollywood is usually interested in making “big,” popular, commercial movies with wide appeal, so they scan publishers’ lists looking for big, popular commercial books. If your book received unfavorable coverage, or if it was published by an obscure press, then it is unlikely that merely submitting your book to Hollywood studios or talent agents will interest them in its movie potential. Someone (usually you or a producer) will have to show them the movie hidden within the pages of your book, if it’s there.

Having your book turned into a movie is like seeing your oxen turned into bouillon cubes.

–John LeCarre

Until then, your book (fiction or nonfiction) is just one incarnation of a story, and really you face the same question every screenwriter faces every day at the keyboard: Will my story make a good movie? If so, what’s the best way to tell my story to the people who make movies?

In lieu of submitting your book, your options are to verbally “pitch” your story to somebody in Hollywood, to write a “treatment” or a “step outline,” or to write a screenplay. If this sounds like a lot of work, it’s because it IS a lot of work. You must either learn how to submit your story to Hollywood in an industry-friendly format, or hire someone to do it for you.

If you Google on “script coverage,” you will find dozens of consultants who will read your screenplay, book, treatment, or story and assess its narrative strengths and “movie potential” and, in essence, provide you with paid “coverage.” These outfits tend to be expensive and are usually not well-regarded among people who actually work in Hollywood.

It was like passing the scene of a highway accident and being relieved to learn that nobody had been seriously injured.

–Martin Cruz Smith (on being asked how he liked the movie version of his novel, Gorky Park)

If you are interested in learning more about how books and short stories are adapted into feature films, visit the Adaptation Archives of John August’s site. If you want to know more about the various formats for submitting movie ideas to people in Hollywood, look at the sample documents page of Done Deal, which features examples of treatments, step outlines, and, yes, even a sample of coverage.

For more information on screenwriting, see the Screenwriting Section of this site.

Good Books On Screenwriting

Posted by Richard Dooling on January 12th, 2006

“In Hollywood, writers are considered only the first draft of human beings.”

–Frank Deford

On Screenwriting

The best resource for screenwriters seeking “official information” about Hollywood is the Writers’ Guild Of America website.

If you want inside information about how writers survive in the business, you are in luck. A dozen or so professional screenwriters maintain excellent websites and blogs featuring everything you need to know about how to write and sell screenplays. Even five or six years ago, this information was impossible to get unless you lived in Los Angeles and worked in the business.

Start with screenwriter John August (Go, Big Fish, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory), who runs a popular blog featuring “a ton of useful information about screenwriting” at John August.com. From there, follow John’s links to Craig Mazin’s The Artful Writer, David Anaxagoras’s Man Bytes Hollywood and many others. When you visit these blogs, leave a thank you note: They’re funny, useful, and well-maintained. Aspiring television writers belong at the always excellent Jane Espenson site.

Done Deal is a great resource for screenwriters, especially for those not living in Los Angeles. Done Deal tracks script, pitch and treatment sales being made in Hollywood. Done Deal also features a useful collection of exemplary documents for aspiring screenwriters who may wonder: “What does a step outline look like?” See document examples.

Many of the canonical books on screenwriting (Robert McKee’s Story, Syd Field’s various books) simply describe good movies, or worse, try to explain what makes a good story. If you want to know what makes a good story, read Aristotle’s Poetics (bound paper from Amazon) or download the text file from Project Gutenberg: Aristotle’s Poetics. If you don’t have time to read the Poetics, then try The 3-Minute Aristotle.

If you want to know, step-by-step, how a writer makes a screenplay, read Lew Hunter’s Screenwriting 434. In 434, Lew executes a screenplay, from idea to final draft, right there on the pages of his book, with lots of witty advice along the way.

Script Formats

If you have questions about how to format a screenplay, read The Complete Guide to Standard Script Formats. At first blush, this excellent book appears to be a dry technical guide to script formatting, but the opening essays on how to read and write a screenplay are worth the price of the entire volume.

Or, for a more modern take, try The Hollywood Standard: The Complete and Authoritative Guide to Script Format and Style, by Christopher Riley, which screenwriter John August has selected as the most useful book on the craft (as opposed to the art) of screenwriting.

Books About The Screenwriting Life


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