101 Reasons to Stop Writing

The Fundamentals of Our Publishing are Wrong

 
This Month's Demotivator:

A Hierarchy of Authors (Overview)

A Hierarchy of Authors examines the scope of writing success, viewed as a career ladder that most writers will never climb.

(It might be slightly less depressing if you read the parts in reverse order.)

Part One

  • The Canon — “Their work is so subtle and complex that if you don’t appreciate it, it’s your fault.”
  • The Blockbuster — “The quality of their novels may fade over the years, but with a yard of shelf space in every bookstore in the Western world, who cares?”
  • The Bestseller — “They’ve reached the point where it takes a streak of four utterly shit novels for readers to start losing interest.”

Part Two

  • The Breakout — “They make it look all too easy, primarily because the author has no fscking idea how it happened.”
  • The Debut — “The possibility of an undiscovered Faulkner, Joyce, Chandler, Asimov, and the subsequent opportunity to boast about reading them.”
  • The Midlist — “Where most published authors remain until their careers quietly die.”

Part Three

  • The Indie — “There are two kinds of independently published author: those on the way up, and those on the way down.”
  • The Short — “The author of seven hundred short stories, eighty of which have been published in such luminous periodicals as Skokie, Illinois After Dark.”
  • The Vain — “The Vain decide to stick it to the man, and get their message out the old fashioned way - by getting scammed.”

Part Four

  • The Slushdweller — “The Slushdweller lives in a hovel made of rejection slips, glued together with the salivations of their own umbrage.”
  • The Bottom Drawer — “They hope their failing is some deficiency of skill, because they understand that their deficiency of talent is pretty permanent.”

Part Five

  • The Unfinished — “The Unfinished sometimes get pretty good at beginnings, but their endings suck - mainly because the end comes when the middle runs out of steam.”
  • The Wannabe — “They feed the fantasies that lead others into the perpetual disappointment of a lifetime spent writing badly.”
 

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A good novel tells us the truth about its hero; but a bad novel tells us the truth about its author.
G.K. Chesterton
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