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Publish
or Perish: It's Not Only for Academia,
Part 1 |
by:
Emily
Hanlon |
I
am the daughter of an obsessed writer. My
father, a math teacher by vocation, a writer
by avocation, brought me up believing that
writing is a fine passion and that the highlight
of a writer's life is being published. He
gave me his love of the English language,
great literature and great writers. He instructed
me on the importance of realistic dialogue,
creating characters we remember, and good
plot twists. I was drawn to his typewriter
before I could spell. In fact, one of our
memorable photographs is of me at about
age three, kneeling on a chair at the table
where he wrote. My little hands are poised
above the keys of his sturdy, black Underwood.
My expression is thoughtful and fixed. By
the side of the Underwood is a bottle of
Schaefer beer.
When I was a child, I breathed in my father's
passion for his own writing and being published.
Before I was old enough to read his stories,
I filled the manila envelopes with his manuscripts
(the onion skin carbon copies ceremoniously
filed away), pasted on the stamps and, holding
the precious envelope in one hand and his
hand in my other, walked to the mail box
where together we slid the envelope into
the slot. Then the wait began, ever hopeful,
for the news that his story had been accepted.
I'm not sure I knew what would happen when
it was accepted, but I knew it would make
him, and thus me very, very, very happy.
Invariably, what happened, of course was
that the manuscript was returned. I felt
his dejection as if it were my own.
"Don't worry, Daddy," I remember telling
him. "When I grow up, I'm going to put all
your stories into a book and publish them
myself." It was a palpable dream for me.
When my father died, he left suitcases filled
with short stories, only two of which had
been published, both in Esquire. In addition,
he'd written three novels about a private
eye named Michael Oliver O'Toole, who remained
his companion during his final years in
a nursing home. Even when my father couldn't
remember who I was, he talked about Michael
Oliver O'Toole.
This durable friendship with Michael Oliver
O'Toole is one of my favorite memories of
my writing father, and I have come to the
conclusion that it is better to have a friend
like Michael Oliver O'Toole than the memory
of signing a fat publishing contract.
I wonder if Dad would agree with me.
I'm not so sure he would. He wanted so desperately
to be well-published. He wanted fame and
fortune and, I believe, felt terribly despondent
for not having had them. He was a victim
of the 'publish or perish" syndrome as surely
as if he'd been a college professor.
I am as much heir to those longing as I
am the recipient of his love of writing.
The disparity between these two inheritances
has made for a lot of angst in my own obsessive
drive to be "well" published.
I did publish, often, well and once very,
very well. I was thrilled that my father
was still alive when I sold my novel Petersburg
to Putnam for a lot of money. I usually
don't talk about the money I have received
for my books, and surely doing so seems
antithetical to a column such as this; however,
the memory of what happened because of the
sale is vital in my memory and cannot be
told without reference to the dollar amount
of the sale of Petersburg. For as if by
the kindness of the Muse herself, even though
my father lay lost in a fog of dementia,
I was able to make him understand. Leaning
over his bed in the nursing home, I said
over and over, "Dad, I did it. I sold my
book for $250,000!"
Finally, he turned to me, his blue eyes
more vibrant than I had seen them for a
long time. He opened them wide to show delight
and his mouth formed a big O shape. "A quarter
of a million dollars! OHHH!" His smile was
wonderful. For that moment, I had my father
back-he'd even, amazingly, translated $250,000
into a quarter of a million! But the light
soon vanished, the O of his mouth deflated
and he turned away. He was gone, lost behind
the shroud of Alzheimer's Disease.
I was ecstatic though. I'd gotten through
to him. He'd understood. I'd done it! For
me and for him. Fame and fortune were on
the way. Nothing was going to stop me now.
But it did. Several months later,
I proposed my next book to my editor, a
novel set in the Middle Ages and she said,
" Don't write this book, Emily. You don't
want to follow up Petersburg with something
like this. It will never sell. No one wants
to read a book set in the Middle Ages."
I wrote it anyway. It was a book waiting
to be born. In one way-commercially-it has
been difficult. Although I had a couple
of near sales, I haven't yet been able to
sell the novel. (Although I now have an
agent who is very excited about its sale)
Were these rejections difficult for me?
Anguishingly so. Am I sorry I wrote the
novel? Absolutely not. Mistress of the Labyrinth
had to be written. For me. I would be sad
if I had never written Petersburg; however,
I would not be the person I am today-a person
I am very glad I uncovered!-if I had not
written Mistress of the Labyrinth. (I further
explore my experiences with Mistress of
the Labyrinth in my book, The Art of Fiction
Writing.)
Through the journey I am taking with Mistress
of the Labyrinth, I have come to understand
that a far truer aphorism than "publish
or perish" is "write or perish". Am I free
of "publish or perish"? Not completely,
I still have days when I cannot face going
into bookstores or bear to read a highly
regarded best seller. There are days when
I lament, "Why me? Why isn't my book published?"
But those days are increasingly more rare.
In my heart and my gut-it is my mind that
sometimes has trouble with this-I feel that
the journey I take in being a writer is
far more exciting and valuable than the
experience of being published. Which is
not to say that I believe it is unimportant
to be published. When one of my students
completes a story or book, I do everything
I can to help her or him find a publisher.
And I still hope that Mistress of the Labyrinth
as well as the novel I am currently writing
will be published. However, I no longer
fear, as I once did, that I will give up
writing and fall into hopeless depression
if this doesn't happen.
If being published were the main reason
that we write, then very few of us would
be writing. (It is my suspicion that today
writers far outnumber readers.) Yet many
writers are haunted by the feeling that
the only way to gain validation as a writer
is to be published.
"If only I were published, my husband, wife,
children, I myself, the world, my high school
English teacher, college roommate, ex-boyfriends,
etc. etc. would take me seriously."
"If only I were published, I would quit
my job and write full time."
"If only I were published, I would ___________."
(You fill in the blank.)
And when we are published, as exciting as
it can be, the experience rarely lives up
to our expectations. As Anne Lamott says
in Bird By Bird, "I tell you, if what you
have in mind is fame and fortune, publication
is going to drive you crazy. If you're lucky,
you will get a few reviews, some good, some
bad, some indifferent. Don't get me started
on places where one is neglected..."
To this, I would add: When we hand over
our validation as a writer to the industry
of publishing (which today is, by-in-large,
hopelessly incompetent both as judges of
good writing and as business people) we
hand over our creative passion, and are
in mortal danger of losing our connection
to the joy of the journey.
Part 2: The Journey of Being a Writer Is
the Biggest Payoff of All!
About the author:
Emily Hanlon is a writing coach who works
with writers all over the world on the telephone.
She is the author of 8 books of fiction,
including Petersburg, translated into several
languages and reached the best sellers list
in England. She leads writing retreats for
women and workshops in this country and
abroad. Her websites are: http://www.thefictionwritersjourney.comand
http://www.awritersretreat.com
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