Wyvern
Sr. Member
 United Kingdom
Posts: 342
crazy tree girl
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« Reply #16 on: April 20, 2010, 09:36:38 PM » |
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Okay, I'm put off ever giving suggestions and advice to new writers. Most of the time authors are happy with my advice - some they leave, some they take, but usually authors are grateful that they weren't just ignored. But this time I think I've had enough. Why do new authors always feel the need to justify how they don't ever need an edit and it's everyone else in the world that just doesn't 'get' their special style? Yes, the market can be demeaning and take all individuality out of a book, but advising how to present to publishers surely doesn't demean one's creative inspiration...does it?
I mean, telling someone that having a word count is important when sending manuscripts to agents and editors is positive advice. I would have thought. I had thought. Until today. Apparantly, if I'd been intelligent enough to take into account that this person had written double spaced, I'd know that when it was single spaced, the length of the book would appear to change. OOOHHH, really? Wow - just like magic. So, he doesn't need to tell agents the word length after all...they'd just 'figure it out'.
Secondly, why should he change anything to suit the market he is submitting to? It would lessen the impact of his work. He wants to do it his way, but wants me to publish it. No, sorry, it doesn't work that way.
This is why publishers and agents just ignore submissions instead of sending out even the standard rejection. Sigh.
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