The decline of fiction starring Jonathan Safran Froer
Last week the Atlantic announced that from here on in, it would be publishing fiction only once a year, in a special issue. Once upon a time, Playboy supported a whole generation of worthwhile authors, from Shel Silverstein to Isaac Bashevis Singer and a host of talented goys, too. Before that, Sports Illustrated published Faulkner. Now, there's The New Yorker and the Paris Review and little else, and the consolidation of publishing houses has nearly wiped out the mid-list author, leaving young authors with just one chance to write that great book before they get dropped, and just a handful of editors deciding who gets that one shot at the brass ring. With the decreasing number of outlets for quality fiction, each season's "young stars" find themselves praised regardless of the quality of their work—there's a common readership for Lahiri and Eggers, even though she's brilliant and he's anything but.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-13 08:45 pm (UTC)It's a book. Turn the page.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-13 08:57 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-13 09:03 pm (UTC)It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-13 09:11 pm (UTC)Targeting one specific author is what reviewers do!
Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-13 09:32 pm (UTC)Wait until Foer's wife's book is released next month. Same basic plot and Amazon's bundling them togethor. The squeaky one gets the grease, and the public is too lazy to look deeper.
I'm a drifing old man here. I remember Spy Magazine went off on Jeff Smith, the frugal gourmet, in some expose. And this was before the child molestation charges came out! The guy went on for pages with nothing but vile hatred, and for what? Guess it's a lot easier to fling a stone and break a window than to put a better one in yourself.
Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-13 09:38 pm (UTC)Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-13 10:49 pm (UTC)Merely trying to have a discussion in which you put the subject header 'Truth' and linking to an article that has a lot of grey areas.
Plainly: I think Siegel craoosed the line between being a critic and a dick.
I don't have a problem agreeing to disagree.
Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-13 10:57 pm (UTC)Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-13 11:53 pm (UTC)You link to an article in which the words fraud and hack are paraded about, you call it truth. I disagree and you call me hostile?
Simple disagreement = hostility?
Yeah, I'm out of here.
Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-14 12:05 am (UTC)Disagree with the article all you want, disagree all you want with me! I'm not telling you not to! You care about this shit and you are honest and forthright, and I really value that about you.
I have nothing bad to say about you at all. I disagreed with you about a matter of literary criticism and you picked a fight, and that is hurtful.
Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-14 12:12 am (UTC)I have nothing bad to say about you, nor am I angry.
Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-14 12:23 am (UTC)Re: It's worse than that.
Date: 2005-04-14 01:07 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-13 10:18 pm (UTC)In Strongmadian phraseology
Date: 2005-04-14 10:29 am (UTC)I CAN'T SPELL NIIIIICHIIIIIIIIII.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-14 02:55 am (UTC)I think what's cool is that there are other channels for distributing literature now -- that is, the Internet. Once people stop thinking that being published in a magazine or as a book is the pinnacle of the art of writing, then more "mid-list" writing will be available for people in a more open forum. All getting a book deal means is that some guy at a publishing house thought your book was good -- not that it actually *is* any good. Like I said, I think it is regrettable that those of us in the literate minority are losing the help of others to find writing that is honestly good, but nature abhors a vacuum, so as this trend continues, counterpressure will eventually move that kind of writing to freer market.
A good example of this already happening is in music, where the RIAA's psychotic market pressure has caused a huge upsurge in internet distribution of music. this isn't all the way there either, but it's coming, I am sure. For a more compelling example, look at cartoons: the nationally syndicated newspaper cartoon is a wholly dead landscape, but webcomics have more than taken up the slack. I don't know if there's a causal relationship there or if it's just a happy coincidence, but I see it as a trend that all kinds of media are going to eventually follow.
Also, I like pie.
As we move into hyperspace
Date: 2005-04-14 10:35 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-04-14 10:38 am (UTC)-- Martis Amis. [date?]
I have no grand point to make with that quote -- it merely comes to mind.
ebooks
Date: 2005-04-14 10:50 am (UTC)After my years of insisting otherwise, I now grudgingly admit that I think we need e-books.
We're so close -- even a cheapo mp3 player has a hundred times the processing and memory power that you'd need to run an e-book. Last I saw, PDAs were almost useable as e-books; but the screen quality just isn't there yet.
I'm not going to pretend that once we have e-books (whether they're actually called that, or whether they're just PDAs with decent-enough screens that you can read off them for more than a minute without going crosseyed), that suddenly we'll have such a reflowering of prose that everyone now with an mp3 player will also be carting around ten amazing novels.
But it would be nice.
Re: ebooks
Date: 2005-04-16 02:52 am (UTC)It's not a perfect solution (until I can get voice activated page-turning, bwahaha), but it works! I think the biggest problem is, as usual, that there are a lot more mass production crap books out there (so far) than truly good ones. It's starting to change, but not fast enough for my taste. What I do find fun is the small-production tinfoil hat crowd are really embracing the medium. You can find some truly insane stuff out there.