Thursday, April 2, 2009

Ditto

It is so handy when someone else says exactly what I've been thinking, but wittier, and in the Globe and Mail so that everyone else can appreciate it too. I'm going to print out Craig Boyko's essay on short stories and novels and pin it to the front of my sweater.

(via Kerry)

In the field behind the cages
RR

2 comments:

Ransermo said...

I wasn't aware that people have a fondness for "fat" books. All my research has indicated that people like books that are ~300 pages, prefer short stories turned into movies rather than novels, and novella is alive and well in science fiction circles.

Is the plight of the short story writer tied to the idea that a writer is that they write everything (novels, articles, columns, plays, poetry, musicals, TV ads, movies, comic books, blogs, television series) rather than specializing?

Andrew M. said...

The funny thing is, just the other day I was thinking, when is that Craig Boyko kid going to write a novel? Seeing how he's conquered every short story mountain this country has to offer (it'll be interesting to see if he takes the Danuta Gleed; come to think of it, it'll be interesting to see if YOU, Ms. Rosenblum, take the Danuta Gleed).

I guess I should feel ashamed.

On the topic of short stories vs. novels, though, I suspect it has something to do with the intensity of the affect a novel can bring to the table, compared to a short story. There are exceptions (Neil Smith's short stories spring to mind), but for the most part a short story doesn't kick me in the nuts the way a novel does. I'm just not as emotionally invested. I feel like a traitor, saying that, given that, at present, the entirety of my publishing career is short fiction.

Also, unrelated, the verification word is berrel. It's almost barrel, a word you don't hear enough.