TDR Letter
December 13, 2003
Subject: Are Canadian publishers too dependant on
grants and furthering Literary Snobbery?
Dear Editor,
Writers have long known that to be published in
Canada you have to be Canadian and write literary
Fiction. Why is it that the
American Publishing Powerhouses all publish
detective/suspense/thriller genre
novels?
Shouldn't these be just as enticing to
Canadian Publishers? Is it that Arts and Literature
Councils, Government
subsidies and grants have made genre writing all but
untouchable in Canada. The
fact that we Canadians can't put forth a writer like
Ludlum or Clancy never mind
Patterson, Morrell or Margolin is not from a writers
lack of trying but rather
from an overall, grant and subsidy riddled and
dependant publishing
industry. Or is it snobbery? Far be it that a publisher
should claim to have
published anything so lowly as a genre thriller set in
America. After all we are
Canadian and should write about Canada or at the very
least it must be Literary
Fiction to attract attention.
Margaret Atwood is an excellent writer however,
millions of readers have never read her literary works.
Millions of readers do buy and read genre fiction
with ever increasing numbers. Its time our subsidized
publishing industry stands
up and represents all writers to all readers. I'm sure
booksellers would welcome
the increase in sales.
American publishers don't care who writes it, where
its location is or whether it is Literary or Commercial
Fiction they want books
that sell. Seems like a simple enough concept doesn't
it!
Steve Clackson
Steve Clackson has written
The "Control Method" to successful
leasing,
a book of poetry, and a novel.
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