THE CAREERS OF NOVELISTS

Many Web sites give fiction writers advice on how to get published. This one gives you real information on what “getting published” means in the life of a writer.

                                                

This is a research project of The Writing Lab at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

We took a group of 37 writers who published their first novels in spring 1977 and compiled career profiles on them, seeking answers to these two basic questions:

                                               

   *How did they get your work out to the public?

 *How did they make a living?

  Start with the Intro

 

Career Profiles

of 37 writers

Context

filling in the background

Comment

Interpreting the data

Top Dogs

The most-published

 

The Publishing Business, 1977-2007

An age of transition.

By the Numbers

Charts tell the story of a generation

 

Writing Professors

They can do and they can teach.

The Literary Novel, 1977-2007 Q & A  Here's what "they say" about making it as a writer...but are they right?

One-Timers

The missing

Thrillers

Surveying the field, 1977-2007.

The Take-Home

Boiling it all down to some advice

Lit & Law Profs

Scholar-novelists.

 

Library Journal

History of the First Novelists

Feature

 

 

Getting Published

So: what does it mean?

 

 

Genre-Crossers

They've got versatility

Expectations

What the First Novelists said in '77.

Links   about self-publishing

Screenwriters

They headed for the Left Coast.

 

 

Blog    Post your comments & questions here.

Suspense specialists

They stuck with their genre.

 

 

 

 

 

Women's Commercial Fiction

That's what publishers called it.

 

 

 

List of All Authors

The 37 in alphabetical order

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

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