DENNIS O’NEIL: Writers vs Editors… Forever
So there I was, sitting at my desk, surrounded by the detritus of the editorial life, not being productive, listening to the voices coming from across the hall: a fellow editor and a freelance writer engaged in something about half way between discussion and argument.
Editor: It’s not the kind of thing we publish.
Writer: But it’s what I want to write!
But we don’t do stuff like that.
But it’s what I want to write!
Another volley of buts, both articulated and implicit, and the meeting ended with the writer still needing to find a way to pay his bills.
I was an editor for more than two decades; you know whom I sided with.
But…what was with the writer, anyhow? Was this an instance of an ego bloating up and strangling its host? Or – and here we enter The Region of Psychological Murk – was the writer subconsciously sabotaging himself so he wouldn’t have to face the possibility of failure?
Or did he have something?
I mean, the writers (and artists) are the creative ones, right? Shouldn’t they be allowed to go where their instincts take them, tugging readers, publishers and those rat bastards known as editors along behind them?
In a word: no. But this is a qualified no.
Begin with the implicit contract between publication and consumer. People have a right to the kind of entertainment (or information) they’ve paid for. Fail to provide it and they’ll fail to continue buying your product.
Now, the qualification on the previous but: What was stated in the preceding paragraph is not an insistence on storytellers repeating the old, shabby tropes, month after month, year after year until the sun cools. If they do, they’ll lose their audience as surely as if they weren’t delivering what the audience is paying for. The material has to be either current or somehow timeless and current is a lot easier. If it isn’t, the audience won’t be able to identify with it and they probably won’t be interested for long. Things change – things must change. (Sorry, you anti-Darwinists, it’s that kind of universe.)
I’m not advocating change for its own sake; that might be another form of ego-bloat. No, I’m saying that an altered world – altered technology, altered mores, altered institutions – suggests new kinds of storytelling that can be achieved without violating the premises of character or genre. Or writers might try delving into what already exists – finding elements already in the material that have been ignored and using it for the sort of story fodder that readers will find fresh and entertaining while, again, preserving character and genre. Or a writer might involve his fiction in subject matter that is new to it, but – yes, again – doesn’t wreck what the reader already likes.
Does all this squash self-expression? Not a bit of it. A long time ago, Raymond Chandler said that the trick to writing genre fiction was to give the reader what the reader wants while getting what the writer wants in, too. Chandler himself proved that it can be done.
RECOMMENDED READING: Ego: The Fall of the Twin Towers and the Rise of an Enlightened Humanity, by Peter Baumann and Michael W. Taft. This splendid little book delivers exactly what the title advertises.
FRIDAY: Martha Thomases
From the writer’s side — I agree. From the professional perspective, if you want someone to give you their money for what you write, you need to give them something that they feel they can sell and make money on. That’s only fair. Sometimes the publisher will go out on a limb, taking chances on what they think they can sell and good for them. If the writer wants to do something very risky, they need to do it on their own dime and, no, they don’t get to use the characters that publisher owns. I’ve stretched many a boundary within a genre and/or character and given permission to do it — and got PAID for it.
Denny, long years back, Fred Pohl told a story of how he took the mickey out of Horace Gold, who as editor of Galaxy was notorious for fooling with other writer’s work. Horace’s story “The Man With English”, about a guy with synasthesia, had bwwn nominated for an awardand was in an anthology Fred and, I think, Cyril Kornbluth, were editing. They ran off a copy, sent the original for publication, and went berserk on the copy, bluepencilling, switching lines, changing the ending, then sending that back to Horace. Days later Fred got a call. The normally articulate Horace could only sputter and say, “Jesus, Fred!”…