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June 20, 2008
Hmmm. Those “good old days” don’t sound much different than the present days. Of course, the “odds of making it as a writer” were certainly much better back then. Writers in the ‘50’s weren’t discouraged (like we are today) by being warned that only 5% of the authors in America make a living at writing. Or were they? Kjelgaard wrote that if he had it to do all over again, “I would not fear competition as such. The very loose statement that there are millions of aspiring writers in the United States means merely that there are millions who write an hour a week, an hour a month, or even an hour a year. But only a very few work hard enough to become professionals.” I would venture to say that it’s just as true today.
One Shocking Difference
By and large, the advice in that 1956 Writer’ Digest is just as applicable today as it was then. I think we can stop harking back to the good old days.
Not everything was the same in 1956 however. In “letters to the editor,” I found a lengthy apology. A magazine had folded without paying for all the articles it had accepted. The editor (who had quit) apologized profusely to writers who were cheated out of their money and offered to do whatever he could to help them collect! Oh, and the name of the magazine that cheated the writers? Honest to Pete, it was called Frauds & Rackets!
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Hi Kristi -
Thanks for bringing us these great nostalgic pieces with lessons for today.
Blessings,
Susan
Comment by Susan J. Reinhardt — June 21, 2008 @ 1:08 am
You’re welcome, Susan. It helped me get into perspective something an agent said in a conference in March, that things have ALWAYS been difficult in publishing, that it’s ALWAYS been hard to sell a book, that it’s ALWAYS taken more grit than talent, etc. I guess it’s true: the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Comment by Kristi Holl — June 21, 2008 @ 11:46 am