The Weekend Updates are making a comeback, after a few lineup changes. Soon people will be talking about how they’re not as good as the old Weekend Updates, then they’ll take another long break, followed by a reunion tour. Along the way one Weekend Update will launch a solo blog with a more serious, experimental style, which GalleyCat will call “pretentious and dull”, one of the Weekend Updates will die in a tragic revision accident, another will be caught sleeping with a Weekend Update from another site. Yes, I know it’s five days late. If you remember the old Weekend Updates, you know this is pretty good for me.
I get to open this installment with the best quote I have read this year:
Stephen Page, the head of Faber & Faber, tells me that they closed their fiction ’slush pile’ (of unsolicited manuscripts, the only agent-free route to a publishing deal) a few years back.
‘We were getting 6,000 a year which we had a work-experience girl reading a page of once every so often. We had only discovered two books on the slush pile in the previous however many years. It was just unfortunate that one of those was Lord of the Rings so we felt a certain obligation to keep looking.’
‘It’s carnage …’ Inside the genteel world of books Carole Cadwalladr, Sunday Observer, Oct. 14 2007
The article discusses the Frankfurt Book Fair, the annual publishing industry meat-market, attended by 100,000, 180,000 or 300,000 people, depending on who makes up the statistic. It (the article, and apparently the fair) focuses mainly on the fallout and rumour-mongering following the disintegration of powerhouse literary agency PFD (after a change of ownership and leadership, the entire staff resigned, leaving a huge roster of writers represented by an agency with no agents). Of course the article degenerates into another “sucks to be a writer” whinefest. The journalist tries to interview agents before the fair, but the only agent who responds is already her agent. That’s the industry, right there.
For me, though, it’s a paradise of quotatery:
Unless you come with a letter of recommendation signed by Martin Amis, you might as well as forget it.
What becomes abundantly clear from Frankfurt is that if you’ve got a book inside, it’s really not a bad idea to keep it there.
‘No writer should ever go to Frankfurt. It’s soul-destroying. You see writers being traded like pork bellies.’
‘You look around and you think the world needs another book like it needs a hole in the head.’
If you read only one linked article from this Weekend Update, I’m wasting my time. (Via Justine Larbalestier.)
Let’s see if I can do this story justice:
A person, who may or may not be a writer (by any reasonable definition), who claims to be (but is not) named Lanaia Lee, believed in her writing — and in her conviction that she is the reincarnation of “Alexander the Great, Imhotep, Napolean [sic], Einstein” — so strongly that she paid a scam artist posing as a literary agent $400 a month to represent her first novel.
Months later, the writer begins to suspect she is being scammed — especially after being contacted by another scam victim who tells her the agent is a scam artist — and immediately signs on to have her next novel (first of a five-book series) represented. The scam artist says the novel needs work, and offers to ghostwrite this work for her.
After at least six months and several thousand dollars more, the writer achieves some dim level of awareness and changes to a different literary agent, a fan fiction author who may or not be a scam, who promptly closes a deal for the (ghostwritten) novel with a vanity press. The writer then sets out to promote the release of the novel in various places on the web, both genre-appropriate and not.
So far, this all-too-common story would only generate a few commiserating comments and what-were-you-thinkings at Absolute Write. But for this interesting wrinkle: The ghostwritten novel contained (at least) an entire chapter plagiarised word-for-word from a novel by late author David Gemmell.
The cry of Shenanigans has echoed for days. The writer and her agent are hysterically denying responsibility, claiming its all the scammer’s fault that they never revised (or re-read) the novel after the “ghostwriting”, and threatening lawsuits against those who uncovered the plagiarism.
The story was broken by Jane Little at Dear Author, in the brilliant post Top Ten Tips for Plagiarists. More can be found at Making Light and Writer Beware. The comments on all three blog entries reveal still more information, if you’re prepared to wade in. Comments from the (second) agent are particularly amusing, as they read like they were dictated in German to a five year old, then translated in to English via BabelFish.
If you skim-read the above, you should still read Top Ten Tips for Plagiarists.

Preparing this Weekend Update was made substantially easier with FeedGhost, an excellent feed reading program for Windows, and the only software I’ve ever encountered where if you have a problem, the developers email you.