{"id":10410,"date":"2014-06-18T12:40:34","date_gmt":"2014-06-18T16:40:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/?p=10410"},"modified":"2014-06-18T12:40:34","modified_gmt":"2014-06-18T16:40:34","slug":"the-strange-world-of-e-writers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/the-strange-world-of-e-writers\/","title":{"rendered":"The Strange World of E-Writers"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"pvc_clear\"><\/div>\n<p id=\"pvc_stats_10410\" class=\"pvc_stats all  \" data-element-id=\"10410\" style=\"\"><i class=\"pvc-stats-icon medium\" aria-hidden=\"true\"><svg xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\" version=\"1.0\" viewBox=\"0 0 502 315\" preserveAspectRatio=\"xMidYMid meet\"><g transform=\"translate(0,332) scale(0.1,-0.1)\" fill=\"\" stroke=\"none\"><path d=\"M2394 3279 l-29 -30 -3 -207 c-2 -182 0 -211 15 -242 39 -76 157 -76 196 0 15 31 17 60 15 243 l-3 209 -33 29 c-26 23 -41 29 -80 29 -41 0 -53 -5 -78 -31z\"\/><path d=\"M3085 3251 c-45 -19 -58 -50 -96 -229 -47 -217 -49 -260 -13 -295 52 -53 146 -42 177 20 16 31 87 366 87 410 0 70 -86 122 -155 94z\"\/><path d=\"M1751 3234 c-13 -9 -29 -31 -37 -50 -12 -29 -10 -49 21 -204 19 -94 39 -189 45 -210 14 -50 54 -80 110 -80 34 0 48 6 76 34 21 21 34 44 34 59 0 14 -18 113 -40 219 -37 178 -43 195 -70 221 -36 32 -101 37 -139 11z\"\/><path d=\"M1163 3073 c-36 -7 -73 -59 -73 -102 0 -56 133 -378 171 -413 34 -32 83 -37 129 -13 70 36 67 87 -16 290 -86 209 -89 214 -129 231 -35 14 -42 15 -82 7z\"\/><path d=\"M3689 3066 c-15 -9 -33 -30 -42 -48 -48 -103 -147 -355 -147 -375 0 -98 131 -148 192 -74 13 15 57 108 97 206 80 196 84 226 37 273 -30 30 -99 39 -137 18z\"\/><path d=\"M583 2784 c-38 -19 -67 -74 -58 -113 9 -42 211 -354 242 -373 16 -10 45 -18 66 -18 51 0 107 52 107 100 0 39 -1 41 -124 234 -80 126 -108 162 -133 173 -41 17 -61 16 -100 -3z\"\/><path d=\"M4250 2784 c-14 -9 -74 -91 -133 -183 -95 -150 -107 -173 -107 -213 0 -55 33 -94 87 -104 67 -13 90 8 211 198 130 202 137 225 78 284 -27 27 -42 34 -72 34 -22 0 -50 -8 -64 -16z\"\/><path d=\"M2275 2693 c-553 -48 -1095 -270 -1585 -649 -135 -104 -459 -423 -483 -476 -23 -49 -22 -139 2 -186 73 -142 361 -457 571 -626 285 -228 642 -407 990 -497 242 -63 336 -73 660 -74 310 0 370 5 595 52 535 111 1045 392 1455 803 122 121 250 273 275 326 19 41 19 137 0 174 -41 79 -309 363 -465 492 -447 370 -946 591 -1479 653 -113 14 -422 18 -536 8z m395 -428 c171 -34 330 -124 456 -258 112 -119 167 -219 211 -378 27 -96 24 -300 -5 -401 -72 -255 -236 -447 -474 -557 -132 -62 -201 -76 -368 -76 -167 0 -236 14 -368 76 -213 98 -373 271 -451 485 -162 444 86 934 547 1084 153 49 292 57 452 25z m909 -232 c222 -123 408 -262 593 -441 76 -74 138 -139 138 -144 0 -16 -233 -242 -330 -319 -155 -123 -309 -223 -461 -299 l-81 -41 32 46 c18 26 49 83 70 128 143 306 141 649 -6 957 -25 52 -61 116 -79 142 l-34 47 45 -20 c26 -10 76 -36 113 -56z m-2057 25 c-40 -58 -105 -190 -130 -263 -110 -324 -59 -707 132 -981 25 -35 42 -64 37 -64 -19 0 -241 119 -326 174 -188 122 -406 314 -532 468 l-58 71 108 103 c185 178 428 349 672 473 66 33 121 60 123 61 2 0 -10 -19 -26 -42z\"\/><path d=\"M2375 1950 c-198 -44 -350 -190 -395 -379 -18 -76 -8 -221 19 -290 114 -284 457 -406 731 -260 98 52 188 154 231 260 27 69 37 214 19 290 -38 163 -166 304 -326 360 -67 23 -215 33 -279 19z\"\/><\/g><\/svg><\/i> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"16\" height=\"16\" alt=\"Loading\" src=\"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-content\/plugins\/page-views-count\/ajax-loader-2x.gif\" border=0 \/><\/p>\n<div class=\"pvc_clear\"><\/div>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/en\/f\/f1\/Phantom_Detective_5-36.jpg\" alt=\"Pulp magazines\" width=\"300\" \/><strong>There&#8217;s always been a place for amateur or new writers to present their efforts and hope to see print:<\/strong> publications where you could submit your work and hope the editors found it good enough to print in an upcoming issue. That&#8217;s how some famous writers got their start, in the <a title=\"Wikipedia\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Pulp_magazine\" target=\"_blank\">pulp magazines<\/a>\u00a0of the 1930s and 40s: Robert Howard, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Isaac Asimov and many more. But all of these depended on getting past the gatekeeper, someone like John Campbell: an editor who set standards &#8211; slim as they may sometimes be &#8211; and wrangled clumsy prose into shape for publication.<\/p>\n<p>And then there have been\u00a0self-publishing houses that can\u00a0eschew the editor and simply print your book as you submit it &#8211; as long as you paid the bill to do so. This type of publishing house\u00a0is\u00a0still operating and plays an important role in getting many local and personal or family books into print. Many authors, frustrated at not being able to find a national publisher, has resorted to self-publishing. The wonderful book of local oral history, <a title=\"Lifegems\" href=\"http:\/\/www.lifegemsbio.com\/book.htm\" target=\"_blank\">Butchers, Bakers and Building the Lakers<\/a> used this method to get into print.<span style=\"color: red;\">*<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Self-publishing runs the gamut from quality books like this to family genealogies, first novels and collections of atrociously sappy poems. It&#8217;s not simply self-printing: it&#8217;s self-editing, self-layout and self-design (unless you hire a professional to do it for you &#8211; there&#8217;s still a role for freelance editors and designers). Still, it has a respectable place in the history of publishing.<\/p>\n<p>I remember in the 1950s and 60s there were ads in magazines for poetry books &#8211; submit your poem and an amount of money and you would get back a book of poems by aspiring writers like yourself, the printing paid for by the collective authors. No editor, just a compositor and printer. And usually awful stuff between the covers. But who cared about the rest if you saw your name in print?<\/p>\n<p>Then came\u00a0the internet and a new venue for self publishing: the website. And from that sprang the blog. But most of these efforts have been limited in scope and size. Almost no one reads a novel online, and would-be authors have had to either break their work into smaller parts or bundle it into a downloadable file for offline printing and reading. With the dwindling public attention span, it&#8217;s hard to get readers to stick around a website to read even something as long and rambling as these blog posts, let alone a whole book.<\/p>\n<p>The Net also gave a boost to fan fiction because it allowed fans to collectivize and publish online. Like many other forms of writing, fan fiction has a long history. I remember many years ago, in the 70s, writing fantasy short stories in the world created by Fritz Leiber in his Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser series. Never saw print, mind you, but it&#8217;s interesting and entertaining to work within the universe created by another writer &#8211; and great practice for the wannabe novelist.<\/p>\n<p>In a similar vein, the original <em>Dungeons and Dragons<\/em> gamified a fantasy universe for players to both participate in and develop their own, personal story lines &#8211; some of which led to fan books and magazine stories.<\/p>\n<p>Now, with the arrival of e-readers, those authors have a new platform, a new audience, and what a world it has spawned.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>I had been told, during <a title=\"Older blog post\" href=\"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/e-readers-worth-the-investment\/\" target=\"_blank\">my investigation into which e-reader to buy<\/a>, that the market for these products exploded when <a title=\"Wikipedia\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Fifty_Shades_of_Grey\" target=\"_blank\">Fifty Shades of Grey<\/a> was published. People embarrassed to be seen reading it in public found they could put it on an e-reader and not suffer the shame. No one knows what you&#8217;re reading on an e-reader. What might not be comfortable to be seen reading at\u00a0work or on public transit was fine on a Kobo or Kindle. E-reader sales soared.<\/p>\n<p>Now I&#8217;ve never read <em>Fifty Shades of Grey<\/em>, and from what I&#8217;ve been told of it, it&#8217;s not a title I plan to download. It doesn&#8217;t interest me. But the brouhaha around it did, so I read several reviews and excerpts online to understand what the kerfuffle was all about. Mommy porn, it has been derisively called. Critics have been unrelenting. The writing in what few excerpts I&#8217;ve read didn&#8217;t impress me, but I&#8217;m no great shakes as a fiction author myself, so who am I to criticize?<span style=\"color: red;\">**<\/span><\/p>\n<p>What impressed me was the number of copies sold: more than 100 million. Stacks of the book were in all the big box stores. Clearly there was a market for this stuff. And others saw that, too. The bandwagon is never empty for long.<\/p>\n<p><a title=\"Wikipedia\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Erotica\" target=\"_blank\">Erotica<\/a> has always been with us, since humans made <a title=\"Wikipedia\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Erotic_art\" target=\"_blank\">cave paintings.<\/a> Greeks and Romans wrote erotic poetry. So did the classical Indian and Chinese poets. An interest in sex\u00a0is just part of being human.<\/p>\n<p>I remember in my youth the furor over Fanny Hill, Venus in Furs and Lady Chatterly&#8217;s Lover. Over Henry Miller, Anais Nin and the Marquis de Sade. Most of it seems tame by the brutal, violent and misogynist standards of today&#8217;s pornography. One cannot look into our history and not find some erotica in every culture &#8211; in writing, song, art and sculpture. And now, inevitably, in e-books, as I discovered.<\/p>\n<p>This week, when I got my first Kindle, I spent a few hours loading it with e-books. My choices were the great works of literature: War and Peace, Vanity Fair, Tale of Two Cities, Frankenstein, Canterbury Tales, Shakespeare&#8217;s plays, Pride and Prejudice&#8230; \u00a0I also wanted to get some light reading. Maybe some detective novels, or science fiction. But I wanted free:\u00a0I didn&#8217;t want to pay for anything, not yet, not until I had some experience with the Kindle and made up my mind what I wanted to use it for. So I went online to various sites offering free e-books and, of course, to Amazon&#8217;s\u00a0Kindle store.<\/p>\n<p><a title=\"Amazon\" href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.co.uk\/gp\/product\/B004I438W6?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=palofami-21&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1634&amp;creative=19450&amp;creativeASIN=B004I438W6\" target=\"_blank\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright\" src=\"http:\/\/ecx.images-amazon.com\/images\/I\/51jGwbo7j9L._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-v3-big,TopRight,0,-55_SX278_SY278_PIkin4,BottomRight,1,22_AA300_SH20_OU02_.jpg\" alt=\"Free e-book\" \/><\/a>What an eye-opener.<\/p>\n<p>There&#8217;s a huge number of people writing books these days and many offering them as free e-books. Of these many\u00a0e-writers;\u00a0none (or at least few)\u00a0have a tree-based published book to their name. I admire this tsunami of creativity, however awkward and amateurish some of it may be. It takes some courage to put a book online and offer it up to the criticism of the world.<\/p>\n<p>I was stunned by the sheer volume of writing available. Every style and genre, fiction and nonfiction, poetry and prose, religion, philosophy and conspiracies. Quality? Who knows until you download and read some of it. But with much of it free or at a very low cost, the investment is a mere fraction of a modern paperback.<\/p>\n<p>These free e-books are not simply on Amazon and iTunes; there are many sites dedicated to or <a title=\"Palace of Amino\" href=\"http:\/\/www.palaceofamino.com\/free-novels-bounty-hunters.htm\" target=\"_blank\">created by these authors<\/a>, or those with <a title=\"Obooko\" href=\"http:\/\/www.obooko.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">whole catalogues<\/a> of free e-books for download. Some with reviews and ratings too, just like Amazon&#8217;s. (My favourite source remains <a title=\"Gutenberg.org\" href=\"http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/\" target=\"_blank\">Gutenberg.org<\/a>, by the way &#8211; where else can you find such vintage delights as <a title=\"Motor Tours in Yorkshire\" href=\"http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/ebooks\/46002\" target=\"_blank\">Motor Tours in Yorkshire<\/a> and such historical oddities as <a title=\"Privy Purse Expenses\" href=\"http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/ebooks\/46009\" target=\"_blank\">The Privy Purse Expenses of King Henry VIII from November MDXXIX, to December<\/a>).<\/p>\n<p>Some titles are just crazy. <em>Vengeance of the Lump Being? The Kretins of Doctor Combobulay?<\/em> Are these satires or serious? I can&#8217;t tell because I hesitate to download them. I suppose that&#8217;s supercilious, so I&#8217;ll have to break free of my innate snobbishness and try a few of them. Of the scifi and mystery titles, I mean.<span style=\"color: red;\">***<\/span><\/p>\n<p>What really surprised me was the number of bodice-rippers and soft-porn titles (some, apparently, not so soft and a lot more explicit than the Harlequins of old, at least according to the descriptions and reviews&#8230; there also seems to be an awful lot of interest in BDSM &#8211; is that because of Fifty Shades? Simply the fashion du jour in this genre? Or was it always lurking there, beside the old Marquis?). Most of these titles appear to be written by women (who can really tell or be sure it&#8217;s not a man&#8217;s nom de plume?). Has the internet created this preoccupation with sex or just unchained it?<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/ecx.images-amazon.com\/images\/I\/51SS6l45VlL._AA278_PIkin4,BottomRight,-55,22_AA300_SH20_OU15_.jpg\" alt=\"Amazon\" width=\"300\" \/>Obooko has seven pages of scifi\u00a0titles, eight of crime-mystery and eleven of romance\/love\/sex, most of which seem to be about the latter. The Kindle store has 29 pages of free e-books books under the keyword &#8220;erotica&#8221; with 48 titles per page. Twenty nine!<\/p>\n<p>Here are a few of the titles from page one:\u00a0<em>His Indecent Training; Julie&#8217;s Huge Birthday Surprise (Eighteen Lust); Spanking Stories Erotica Under His Hands; Pastor Ryan Helps Out (Taboo Pastor Erotica) ; Two Men for Me; Alpha Lust: A Wolf&#8217;s Embrace; Glory Holes And Blumpkins; Captured by Cavemen; Dark Desire; His Indecent Lessons; Tasting The Boy Next Door; Sensual Erotica 12: Thrilling Her; Filled by the Doctor: Rough Sex Dental Erotica; Punished And Exposed; Sexy Little Cheerleaders: Practice Makes Perfect; Kidnapped the Wrong Sister; In the Barn (Taboo Forbidden Erotica Book 8); Carmen&#8217;s New York Climax; \u00a0Office Toy; Bought By The Billionaire Brothers; The Man Who Came Too Much; The Ride Home (The Babysitter Book 1); &#8220;tell her she&#8217;s pretty!&#8221; How Tina helped Becca seduce her maid; Above the Dungeon; Secret Story Time: More Filthy Fantasies; The Quickie (Sexy and Short Erotica Story).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>There are 28 pages more like this. Just in comparison there are 24 pages of free e-scifi. The first title of which is &#8220;<em>T<\/em><em>aken: Erotic Science Fiction and Fantasy<\/em>&#8221; followed by &#8220;<em>Captives of New Pompeii<\/em>,&#8221; another\u00a0scifi-erotica title. There are horror-erotica titles, vampire-erotica and so on. So obviously the genres overlap.<\/p>\n<p>There are even whole sites dedicated to erotica e-books, from the soft-core to XXX-rated. Now I didn&#8217;t read any of them, but from the lurid descriptions, there\u00a0seems a certain repetitive &#8220;sameness&#8221; about\u00a0many of these titles that makes my eyes glaze over after a few of them. I get a similar sort of feeling when I look through the bookshelves of fantasy titles &#8211; oh look, <em>another<\/em> book about orcs and dwarves and a magic ring&#8230;. oh look, <em>another<\/em> book about bondage and submission&#8230;. oh look, <em>another<\/em> Facebook picture with a cute kitten in it&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p>There&#8217;s a <em>lot<\/em> of written erotica online. Is there really such a large audience for it? I don&#8217;t know. Maybe there are more writers of it than readers. Maybe there are just a few prodigiously prolific e-writers pumping out volumes of this stuff under an army of assumed names. There&#8217;s no way to tell about most of it.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;m not passing any moral judgment on this stuff. I&#8217;m not a prude and can be as titillated as anyone by a well-written bit of erotica. Although it&#8217;s not the sort of material I normally choose for reading or viewing, sometimes passages appear in books that are otherwise in another genre. As for the dedicated e-books, I may pass literary judgment, should I ever read some of it, and comment editorially on grammar and punctuation, but seldom sit in moral judgment over another person&#8217;s personal tastes.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;m simply surprised by how widespread and ubiquitous this literary\u00a0erotica\u00a0seems. And how many more e-writers are pursuing this genre than seem to be pursing other types of literature.<\/p>\n<p>I personally don&#8217;t think I could write this stuff &#8211; I overwrite and intellectualize my fiction at the best of times. Not what most of readers want in this genre, I suspect. And writing it seems a little too clinical, too detached, like it would take the fun out of it. Or maybe that&#8217;s just my style of work.<\/p>\n<p>Am I just getting so old that I no longer bother with or am\u00a0titillated by these things? Sometimes it all seems so silly, so over-rated and under-written that it can&#8217;t be taken seriously. Someone in Amazon should stand up and say to these authors and readers, &#8220;Okay, you&#8217;ve done erotica to the nth degree. There&#8217;s nothing new here, nothing left to say. We&#8217;ve run out of \u00a0cover ideas. Time to move onto something else.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I feel sheepish and somewhat quaint downloading my Canterbury Tales and chuckling over the &#8220;racy&#8221; Miller&#8217;s Tale or the saucy bits in Fielding&#8217;s Tom Jones. Funny how something as technologically up-to-date as an e-reader can feel so stuffy and old-fashioned by simply downloading a few, familiar books into its memory.<\/p>\n<p><strong>~~~~~<\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: red;\">*<\/span> I worked in book publishing for many years, from sales rep to book editor and I know somewhat about how Canadian publishing\u00a0operates, at least\u00a0how it operated\u00a0through the 70s and 80s. I also owned a bookstore and managed a couple of others, so I have experience in the retail side of publishing, too.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: red;\">**<\/span> I admit to another interest: learning about formats and venues for publishing my own e-books&#8230; I have a few\u00a0works-in-progress &#8211; humour, fantasy and scifi, not erotica &#8211; I would like to see in this format.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: red;\">***<\/span> Okay, there are even\u00a0<a title=\"Pinterest\" href=\"http:\/\/www.pinterest.com\/marlogrod\/crazy-book-titles\/\" target=\"_blank\">crazier titles<\/a> in the world of print.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<div class=\"pvc_clear\"><\/div>\n<p id=\"pvc_stats_10410\" class=\"pvc_stats all  \" data-element-id=\"10410\" style=\"\"><i class=\"pvc-stats-icon medium\" aria-hidden=\"true\"><svg xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\" version=\"1.0\" viewBox=\"0 0 502 315\" preserveAspectRatio=\"xMidYMid meet\"><g transform=\"translate(0,332) scale(0.1,-0.1)\" fill=\"\" stroke=\"none\"><path d=\"M2394 3279 l-29 -30 -3 -207 c-2 -182 0 -211 15 -242 39 -76 157 -76 196 0 15 31 17 60 15 243 l-3 209 -33 29 c-26 23 -41 29 -80 29 -41 0 -53 -5 -78 -31z\"\/><path d=\"M3085 3251 c-45 -19 -58 -50 -96 -229 -47 -217 -49 -260 -13 -295 52 -53 146 -42 177 20 16 31 87 366 87 410 0 70 -86 122 -155 94z\"\/><path d=\"M1751 3234 c-13 -9 -29 -31 -37 -50 -12 -29 -10 -49 21 -204 19 -94 39 -189 45 -210 14 -50 54 -80 110 -80 34 0 48 6 76 34 21 21 34 44 34 59 0 14 -18 113 -40 219 -37 178 -43 195 -70 221 -36 32 -101 37 -139 11z\"\/><path d=\"M1163 3073 c-36 -7 -73 -59 -73 -102 0 -56 133 -378 171 -413 34 -32 83 -37 129 -13 70 36 67 87 -16 290 -86 209 -89 214 -129 231 -35 14 -42 15 -82 7z\"\/><path d=\"M3689 3066 c-15 -9 -33 -30 -42 -48 -48 -103 -147 -355 -147 -375 0 -98 131 -148 192 -74 13 15 57 108 97 206 80 196 84 226 37 273 -30 30 -99 39 -137 18z\"\/><path d=\"M583 2784 c-38 -19 -67 -74 -58 -113 9 -42 211 -354 242 -373 16 -10 45 -18 66 -18 51 0 107 52 107 100 0 39 -1 41 -124 234 -80 126 -108 162 -133 173 -41 17 -61 16 -100 -3z\"\/><path d=\"M4250 2784 c-14 -9 -74 -91 -133 -183 -95 -150 -107 -173 -107 -213 0 -55 33 -94 87 -104 67 -13 90 8 211 198 130 202 137 225 78 284 -27 27 -42 34 -72 34 -22 0 -50 -8 -64 -16z\"\/><path d=\"M2275 2693 c-553 -48 -1095 -270 -1585 -649 -135 -104 -459 -423 -483 -476 -23 -49 -22 -139 2 -186 73 -142 361 -457 571 -626 285 -228 642 -407 990 -497 242 -63 336 -73 660 -74 310 0 370 5 595 52 535 111 1045 392 1455 803 122 121 250 273 275 326 19 41 19 137 0 174 -41 79 -309 363 -465 492 -447 370 -946 591 -1479 653 -113 14 -422 18 -536 8z m395 -428 c171 -34 330 -124 456 -258 112 -119 167 -219 211 -378 27 -96 24 -300 -5 -401 -72 -255 -236 -447 -474 -557 -132 -62 -201 -76 -368 -76 -167 0 -236 14 -368 76 -213 98 -373 271 -451 485 -162 444 86 934 547 1084 153 49 292 57 452 25z m909 -232 c222 -123 408 -262 593 -441 76 -74 138 -139 138 -144 0 -16 -233 -242 -330 -319 -155 -123 -309 -223 -461 -299 l-81 -41 32 46 c18 26 49 83 70 128 143 306 141 649 -6 957 -25 52 -61 116 -79 142 l-34 47 45 -20 c26 -10 76 -36 113 -56z m-2057 25 c-40 -58 -105 -190 -130 -263 -110 -324 -59 -707 132 -981 25 -35 42 -64 37 -64 -19 0 -241 119 -326 174 -188 122 -406 314 -532 468 l-58 71 108 103 c185 178 428 349 672 473 66 33 121 60 123 61 2 0 -10 -19 -26 -42z\"\/><path d=\"M2375 1950 c-198 -44 -350 -190 -395 -379 -18 -76 -8 -221 19 -290 114 -284 457 -406 731 -260 98 52 188 154 231 260 27 69 37 214 19 290 -38 163 -166 304 -326 360 -67 23 -215 33 -279 19z\"\/><\/g><\/svg><\/i> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"16\" height=\"16\" alt=\"Loading\" src=\"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-content\/plugins\/page-views-count\/ajax-loader-2x.gif\" border=0 \/><\/p>\n<div class=\"pvc_clear\"><\/div>\n<p>There&#8217;s always been a place for amateur or new writers to present their efforts and hope to see print: publications where you could submit your work and hope the editors found it good enough to print in an upcoming issue. That&#8217;s how some famous writers got their start, in the pulp magazines\u00a0of the 1930s and 40s: Robert Howard, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Isaac Asimov and many more. But all of these depended on getting past the gatekeeper, someone like John Campbell: an editor who set standards &#8211; slim as they may sometimes be &#8211; and wrangled clumsy prose into shape for \u2026 click below for more \u2193<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":true,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[8,436,223,431],"tags":[406,438,437,147,139],"class_list":["post-10410","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-books","category-e-books-e-readers","category-literary-pretensions","category-technology-gadgets","tag-books-reviews","tag-erotica","tag-publishing","tag-reading","tag-technology"],"a3_pvc":{"activated":true,"total_views":26282,"today_views":0},"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"jetpack-related-posts":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10410","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=10410"}],"version-history":[{"count":11,"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10410\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":10421,"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10410\/revisions\/10421"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=10410"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=10410"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ianchadwick.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=10410"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}