101 Reasons to Stop Writing

The Fundamentals of Our Publishing are Wrong

 
This Month's Demotivator:

Weekend Updates: Category Archive

Weekend Update (12 - 18 November 2007)

Stop Writing, The Hard Way

  • Ira Levin, whom Stephen King called “the Swiss watchmaker of suspense novels”, died November 12, aged 78. Two of his novels (Rosemary’s Baby and The Stepford Wives) and their film adaptations have left indelible imprints on our culture. Two of his plays, No Time for Sergeants and Deathtrap, were phenomenal Broadway hits. The film adaptation of his novel Sliver proved conclusively that the public’s fascination with Sharon Stone post-Basic Instinct did not extend to seeing her fully clothed.

Writer’s Strike: So Not Funny It Hurts

Publishing Will Eat Itself

  • Publisher’s Weekly reports that two major (and totally separate) New York book fairs are to be held on the same day. No, it’s not an accident, and yes, someone’s being an ass about it.
  • Judith Regan, deposed Queen of Publishing, is suing Rupert Murdoch, the billionaire tyrant, for defamation. She’s asking for $100 million in damages, the broadcast rights to season 7 of The Simpsons, and 50% of Bill O’Reilly’s ties. The Smoking Gun has the lawsuit, if you like your fiction dry and lawyery.

News to Know, to Keep Up with the Conversation

From the Blogosphere

  • Nathan Bransford wonders aloud if the current boom in Young Adult novels means that more young adults are buying Young Adult books, or if more adults are buying Young Adult books while trying to figure out how to write a Young Adult book.
  • JA Konrath is on speed (and on crack, if you ask me).
  • StupidFilter is a project to build software that can detect and filter “rampant stupidity in written English”, in an attempt to reduce the escalating roar of idiocy drowning out meaningful conversation on the Internet. Designed to catch “formal stupidity”, of the “ur stoopid” variety, it unfortunately won’t be able to discern the clear expression of stupid ideas or opinions, but it may prove useful for literary agents in screening out the very worst of the electronic slushpile. The designers’ reassuring arrogance that they can determine, on a 1-5 scale, the relative worthlessness of your writing is worth a read in itself. (Via Esoteric Science Resource Center.)
  • Joshua Henkin, guest blogging at The Elegant Variation, does a terrible job of explaining why he thinks “Show, Don’t Tell” is terrible advice. I think he’s right, but for the wrong reasons.
  • He does better when he addresses the inevitable “How do you write?” book tour question:

    Many writers find this question annoying, probably because they believe that implicit in the question is the belief that anyone could compose a great novel if only they possessed the right pen.

  • And finishes with paraphrased advice from John Cheever, to never use three words in a row that he’d seen used in a row before. That’s why he had to paraphrase it.

Quotes Taken Out of Context

  • Bella Stander: “If I can crush your writing dreams and have you crawling out of here on your bellies, my work will be done.”

Stuff I Really Shouldn’t Tell You

  • Victoria Strauss has the best roundup of the myths of self-publishing I’ve read. She’s not anti-selfpub, just advocating caution. If you are considering self-publishing, and you don’t read this article, someone’s going to royally screw you, and it might even be you.

Stop Writing if You Need This Advice