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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!juliet!news
- From: frank@fnbc.com (Frank Mitchell)
- Subject: Re: Rejection Slips
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.145242.25616@fnbc.com>
- Sender: news@fnbc.com
- Organization: First National Bank Of Chicago, Chicago IL, USA
- References: <idoy.724771053@crux1.cit.cornell.edu>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 92 14:52:42 GMT
- Lines: 35
-
- In article <idoy.724771053@crux1.cit.cornell.edu> idoy@crux1.cit.cornell.edu
- (Mike Wilson) writes:
- > >Given that the writer has sent a clean, properly formatted manuscript to an
- > >appropriate journal or magazine, and that the writer has done the research
- > >and *knows* the magazine publishes the style of writing he or she produces,
- > >there is no excuse for a magazine that accepts unsolicited submissions
- > >to insult a writer's efforts in this way.
- >
- > I very much agree, but I have to say something in defense of rejection
- > slips in general.
- [story about personal rejection letters deleted]
- >...a more general rejection made the process
- > much less painful for everyone involved.
-
- Once I heard Frederick Pohl tell a story of a man who submitted a story a week
- to IF magazine when Pohl was editor. Every story was awful, and Pohl sent this
- poor man form rejection letters every week. Once he took pity on the man and
- wrote a personal note telling him that his work lacked basic components of a
- good story, and that he should stop submitting his work until he learns to fix
- these problems, or maybe consider another line of work.
-
- Said writer took this as personal encouragement, and sent two stories a week.
-
- And from the other side ... I once got a three-page rejection letter/critique
- from one magazine; it both depressed the hell out of me, and made me wonder if
- the editor was paying attention in some spots ...
-
- So yes, a *polite* and *tactful* form letter is definitely the way to go.
-
- --
- Frank Mitchell, Business Systems Analyst, First National Bank of Chicago
- email:frank@fnbc.com (NeXTmail)
-
- "A sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology."
- -- me, I think (twisting Clarke's Law, of course)
-