“Deborah Treisman, Fiction Editor of The New Yorker, said last year that writers submitting to the slush pile aren’t very savvy about about the business of publishing and therefore must not be savvy about writing” Maud Newton.
Having no submission facility is a much more ethical way of excluding the preterite masses of the non-savvy.
what’s always puzzling to me is this: why the hell do non-solicited submitters think so dam highly of themselves? you are not a customer. this in not a restaurant. assume you will be rejected. assume you are wasting your time. good magazines are not quilt clubs. just because you’re around doesn’t mean you’re important. what’s wrong with that? it’s fine not to matter. think about all the people in the world who have no idea you exist. it’s okay. exist when you can and be nothing most of the time. just like everybody else. you’re no different just because you have an e-mail account. you’re no different because you pressed save on the DOC file. if a party is taking place and you weren’t invited it doesn’t mean the party has ceased to be. it only means you need to figure out another way to pass your time.
before i published ‘a lot’ i simply wanted to publish ‘a lot’; i think that is an honest feeling. i don’t think the internet made humans glib, i think humans made humans glib. i can’t wait until all the websites is dead, then i can be alive again. 404 is god’s street address.
Is there a way to “like” a post here?
yup, right above where it says “showing x comments”
yup, right above where it says “showing x comments”
Number one white cop killer in America, nay, the world.
Number one white cop killer in America, nay, the world.
so, do I just submit my story here in the comments section?
so, do I just submit my story here in the comments section?
funny
the ethics of this! the ethics!
this feels even more relevant after reading Daniel Nester and Steve Black’s study on Bookslut.
http://www.bookslut.com/features/2011_02_017197.php
Long live the dead website.
“why does it look dead, it is a website”
is maybe my new favorite thing ever
“Deborah Treisman, Fiction Editor of The New Yorker, said last year that writers submitting to the slush pile aren’t very savvy about about the business of publishing and therefore must not be savvy about writing” Maud Newton.
Having no submission facility is a much more ethical way of excluding the preterite masses of the non-savvy.
long live the new flesh
“is X viable” and “is X dead” are two very different questions
but similar in that they are both dumb
what’s always puzzling to me is this: why the hell do non-solicited submitters think so dam highly of themselves? you are not a customer. this in not a restaurant. assume you will be rejected. assume you are wasting your time. good magazines are not quilt clubs. just because you’re around doesn’t mean you’re important. what’s wrong with that? it’s fine not to matter. think about all the people in the world who have no idea you exist. it’s okay. exist when you can and be nothing most of the time. just like everybody else. you’re no different just because you have an e-mail account. you’re no different because you pressed save on the DOC file. if a party is taking place and you weren’t invited it doesn’t mean the party has ceased to be. it only means you need to figure out another way to pass your time.
yeah, that one!
Oh, fucking A!
before i published ‘a lot’ i simply wanted to publish ‘a lot’; i think that is an honest feeling. i don’t think the internet made humans glib, i think humans made humans glib. i can’t wait until all the websites is dead, then i can be alive again. 404 is god’s street address.
blake is publishing a submission
sonant capillaries
win win
chaos is subletting, with a view to granulating the foundation
A sumbitchshun is the lifeblood of Oedipal overthrow?
cattiness is underrated as a survival technique. catty blake is my favorite blake. (did i get the whole anus, p.h.? i know you watch for that shit.)
writers need readers. magazines just need money.
the capitalist mode of appreciation is a dead scene man, in the future everything is free
as kathy acker said “There should be all the food and medicine you need […] Luxury, fun, etc. everywhere all the time.”
The lifesblood of a magazine is reading fees. HIGH reading fees. Duh.
that sounds fine. i didnt mean to express an ideology. just an observation.
the lifeblood of a magazine is actual blood
that and guts (or is it “butts?”)
butts.
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/ask/2008/12/questions-for-treisman.html
As a writer, and among the writers I know, he writer’s natural condition is wanting to punch most things most of the time, so this seems about right.