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Glenn Ingersoll's avatar

"My second book, which was more left of center, much more experimental, was actually rejected 77 times in 13 years."

So much for the fantasy that winning a high prestige prize (the Yale, won by John Ashbery, Adrienne Rich, W.S. Merwin!) sets you up for success. 77 rejections for a Yale winner's follow up. Whew! What does that add up to in reading/contest entry fees? With a typical reading fee being $20 ...

My thanks to you -- and to Sean for talking about his numbers. I have entered the Yale Series twice. Once when I was under 40, and last year when I saw that the age limitation had been removed. You no longer have to be Younger! I try to avoid reading fees. It seems to me that if I spend $2000 paying editors just to read my manuscript, I might as well publish it myself and give it away. I don't know. How do we calculate these things? I mean, I justified the Yale entry fee by telling myself I was buying a lottery ticket -- the chances of winning are low, but the rewards would be great. Sean's experience with finding a publisher for his second book reminds me of something I read about first book contests -- the winner has not found a publisher committed to the poet's future. It's a one-time thing. I don't know how many publishers commit to their writers these days anyway (not that I have historical statics), but this posits the first book contest as a cul-de-sac or a peak? The poet has to start from scratch with subsequent books. Maybe the poet always does? The cachet of being winner of a prestigious contest must help in some ways -- getting readings or teaching gigs, say -- but Sean's example shows that it doesn't warm the hearts of other publishers. I mean, I hope it doesn't chill the hearts of other publishers.

I am talking with a publisher right now. It's a small press so the editor is the publisher. I just sent her a new version of the manuscript, trying to follow her suggestions for revision. I wait on tenterhooks for her thoughts. This one isn't a collection of poems, but more prose poem/essay. The poetry manuscript (the one that didn't win the Yale) is still looking for a friend -- I have a ways to go before I get to 77. I will try to enjoy the journey.

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Susan Alkaitis's avatar

Interesting perspectives on writing in first person. Lots to consider here. Thank you.

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