Pretty Pathetic, Publishers
Ever wonder what would happen if great works of literature were disguised and submitted to publishers today? In today’s market-driven advertising-controlled literary world, would the great writers of yesteryear be rejected along with the rest of us?
Turns out, the answer is yes. Writer David Lassman sent typed chapters of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice to 18 literary agents and publishers, changing only the titles and character names.
He got 12 rejection. No one offered him a book contract. Only one of them recognized Austen’s work.
Penguin, which republished Pride and Prejudice last year, described the work as a “really original and interesting read” but not right for them.
The literary agent Christopher Little, who represents JK Rowling, said it was “not confident placing this material with a publisher”.
These people are not doing their jobs. They don’t recognize Jane Austen? Even more troubling, they can’t recognize brilliant writing when they see it? Makes you wonder what else are they missing.
Thanks to Marcia for the link.