Er, yeah, thanks.Has a European book publisher taken your book?
Well, yes - them too.There are lots (tons actually, though the intenet is driving amny out of business) of magazines in the US looking for good writing to fill their pages. .
But that's not the point I was making. I'm a suppoter of the phenomenon that the tension between creative impulse and market forces produces the most interesting and commercially viable work. That's just the grown-up stuff of being a writer.
I was simply saying that although interests (hello, Cindy in Hays) outside the creative (artsy writers) and the commercial (publishing sales projections) may exercise influence on the market reaction to a published work, what really matters is the tendency of multinational monoliths to homogenise their output in such a way that it neither excites me nor offends Cindy.
I'm all for books provoking controversy, and even bans. What worries me is that the tendency is for such books not even to get far enough to be banned.


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