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Avocado ([info]white_serpent) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2009-04-17 16:05:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:authorwank, elitism, publishing, special snowflake syndrome

But why isn't your book selling?
It's all the fault of literary agents, who are single-handedly destroying literature everywhere!

Excerpt:

The substantial and nearly unassailable wall that separates you from us has been under construction for decades. You can find the names of its architects and gatekeepers on your telephone-callers list, and in your email in-box. They are the literary agents—that league of intellectual-property purveyors who bring you every new manuscript you ever see, those men and women who are so anxious to gain access to the caverns of treasure they believe you sit upon like some great golden goose that they would likely hack one another’s heads off were they not united by one self-serving mission: to ensure that quality fiction never hits your desk.

Just a tiny bit of entitlement, elitism, and self-delusion.

And some responses...


(Read comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]julian_black
2009-04-18 11:59 pm UTC (link)
I managed to make it through the first three pages (just barely). There was nothing remotely comic in those three pages, and the only thing that was moving--well, let's just say the book would have been moving right back onto the shelf were I browsing it in a bookstore. The writing is competent, but pedestrian--hardly what I'd expect from a "literary" writer. The first sentence is utter crap; I'd reject it on that basis alone. Nothing that happens feels believable, and the protagonist is pathetic and unlikeable.

As I read it I thought, "This is an id-book. This is a book where all of the author's most deeply suppressed psychological issues come exploding out all over the page, and she can't see them even as she's writing them." The Twilight series are all id-books. So is Anne Rice's Violin (okay, everything by AR is, but that one is back-away-slowly-before-it-eats-your-face crazy). I get embarrassed when people engage in inappropriate oversharing about their bodily functions, and id-books have a similar effect. Author, I so did not need to know that about you.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]ecchaniz0r
2009-04-19 12:32 am UTC (link)
That is an EXCELLENT description for such a book. Can I adopt the term? It could totally also apply to OH GOD ISSUES OH GOD fanfic too - idfic - and it's so very very a propos.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]singe
2009-04-19 05:56 am UTC (link)
IdFic. That's perfect. *runs with it*

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]dragonfangirl
2009-04-20 02:00 pm UTC (link)
The book would be moving as I threw it across the room, most likely.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]catmoran
2009-04-20 02:47 pm UTC (link)
I read the first couple pages, and came away with a deep desire to kick the protagonist in the ass. Repeatedly.

I'd kick the doctor in the ass too, but he's so one dimensional I don't think my foot would make contact.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


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