OO1-JS1
World's Smallest Essay on the Coming Miniaturization of Literature
Copyright © by Jason Sanford,
2/2/03
The other day, a well-known author was asked that oft-asked and irritating
question, "What advice do you have for new writers?" Her reply:
"Make sure what you have to say is worth reading, because our libraries are
being filled up by minutia."
* * *
According to industry statistics, more books than ever are being sold, but these
massive sales numbers are being reached because of fewer and fewer authors.
Stephen King. John Grisham. Nora Roberts. Forget all others.
* * *
minutia (noun)--a minute or minor detail.
* * *
When Ann Godoff, the respected head of the Random House Trade Group, was
recently fired, it wasn't because she hadn't made money for her corporate
bosses. It was because she hadn't made tons and tons of money. As the New York
Times stated, "The old assumptions of book publishing--that it earned
modest, steady profits built on a respected stable of authors and a deep
backlist--now seem practically prehistoric."
Forget the midlist--those books that sell around ten thousand copies and take
years to find a readership. Forget that the midlist is precisely where the
modestly-bought heart and soul of literature lives.
If James Joyce was alive today, Ulysses would be a midlist book. Why would
anyone publish it when they could instead make a fortune off the new Tom Clancy
novel?
* * *
Etymology of minutia:
The word comes from several Latin words including mintiae, meaning petty
details; mintia, meaning smallness; and mintus, meaning small. Minutia dates
from around 1751--right smack in the middle of the scientific revolution.
* * *
The old joke is that specialists learn more and more about less and less until
they knows everything about nothing, while generalists learn less and less about
more and more until they know nothing about everything.
How about another choice besides two different types of the same minutia?
* * *
The scientific revolution changed how people thought about themselves. Human
knowledge became abstract. Truth could be empirically tested, proved, or
disproved. The world was seen as a giant machine and could be broken down into
tiny pieces.
Into minutia.
* * *
Most given advice in MFA creative writing programs: "Show, don't
tell."
* * *
The world is growing smaller every day--and not in the "It's a small
world" vision of Walt Disney or "We're all neighbors in an
interconnected web of life." Instead, it is becoming more and more possible
to find out anything about everything. Want to know if God exists? Type the
request into a search engine and you'll get a million different places promising
God's address on a silver platter.
Why read literature to understand the world when you can just Google it instead?
* * *
Second most given advice in MFA programs: "Write what you know."
* * *
[Originally published in Flak Magazine. Hear Jason Sanford read this essay on Omniversica's Show # 1, recorded 1/30/03]
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