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writing for godot

Comments by a Struggling Author

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Written by Carlos T Mock, MD   
Wednesday, 02 March 2011 09:51
With the announcement of Border's Bankruptcy Chapter 11 filing on February 16, 2011, the death of the American publishing industry has been sealed.

The Big chain stores like Borders and Barnes and Noble were the demise of the small independent bookstores--the “Walmarts of the book industry.” Now they are becoming dinosaurs. Book store chains have been under severe pressure from discount sellers such as Amazon and Walmart in the mass market, along with the rapid growth in popularity of electronic book readers. Borders and rival Barnes & Noble have both been investing in new technology to better compete in the digital marketplace.

So where does that leave small publishing companies and the struggling new writers?

The big publishing companies ONLY want to publish celebrities. Donald Rumsfeld, Sara Palin, and George W. Bush are but a few examples of the trash that the big publishing companies are investing in and marketing. These books are a waste of the trees that died for the books to be sold. They are trash and lies for a specific readership that is either moronic or fanatics to certain ideals and need to be reassured so as not to crumble when the truth be known.

The second kind of books that are being published deal with religion. The best example of this is The Shack: which was written by the protagonist's best friend, William (Willie) P. Young. The book is boring, repetitive and overly complex. Nothing makes sense and I thought it was going to be a parody, since God is portrayed by a Black woman. But to hear the same things over and over again from page 88 to page 238 was hard to follow. To me it is irrelevant whether “the miracle” that happened to the protagonist is true or not. The author told the story in such a bad way that unless your religious beliefs coincide with those of the author, you will be terribly disappointed. Again the publisher is looking for morons or fanatics to reassure.

The third kind of books that are being promoted deal with vampires, werewolves, and other supernatural mumbo jumbo. The best example of this is the Twilight Series. Having read most of Ann Rice's books, I experienced how the vampire books got from good and erotic to verbose and boring. Ms. Meyer is unfortunately the later version of Ms. Rice. I believe that the audience Ms. Meyer is witting for is high school girls, which might explain her poor performance. Bella and Edward's story can be summarized in two paragraphs. A very insecure girl moves to Forks in Washington State; escaping her mother who recently remarried, to live with her father, the town sheriff. She meets a very awkward boy, Edward and slowly falls for him. She finally guesses that he is a vampire, and their relationship grows until Edward places Bella in great danger. After some chasing around, Bella is saved by her boyfriend. How Ms. Meyer got almost 500 pages to tell us this baffles me. She is extremely boring, I believe this book is an insult to our youth. They deserve better.

It is not a coincidence that no American novelist has won the Nobel prize in literature since 1993, when Toni Morrison from Ohio did. Instead the artistic and literary talent has shifted to Latin America, Europe, and Asia—Peruvian Mario Vargas Llosa won the 2010 Nobel price in Literature—Mexican Octavio Paz in 1990, The Spanish Camilo José Cela in 1989, Colombian Gabriel García Márquez in 1982, and Chilean Pablo Neruda in 1972. No American has won this coveted price since 1962, other than Toni Morrison in 1993. The best books I’ve read in a long time are by:

Spanish Matilde Asensi: El Último Cato (The Last Cato), Todo Bajo el Cielo (Everything under the sky), El Origen Perdido, (The Lost Origin), and el Salon de Ámbar (The Amber Room).

Dominican Junot Díaz: The Brief Wondrous life of Oscar Wao (La maravillosa Vida Breve de Oscar Wao) Winner of the 2008 Pulitzer Price

Spanish Julia Navarro: La Biblia de Barro (The Mud Bible), Hermandad de La Sábana Santa (The brotherhood of the holy Grail), and La Sangre de los Inocentes (The Innocents’ Blood).

Spanish Arturo Pérez Reverete’s El Club Dumas which was used to create the script for the movie “The Ninth Gate.”

Spanish Javier Sierra: La Cena Secreta (The secret supper), Las Puertas Templarias (The Templar Doors), La dama Azul (The Blue Lady), and The Seville Communion.

Spanish Carlos Ruiz Zafón: El Juego del Angel (The Angel’s Game) and La Sombra del Viento (The Shadow of the Wind)--my favorites!!!

Peruvian Mario Vargas Llosa’s best: La Fiesta del Chivo (The Goat’s Party)--close second

Not to mention the talent from Afghanistan: Khaled Hosseini’s Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns

From Sri Lanka: Shyam Selvadurai’s Funny Boy and Cinnamon Gardens

And, finally, from Sweden: The Millennium Trilogy by Stieg Larsson

I think that unless the American publishers start looking for and promoting talent, instead of promoting bad literature and cultist themes by celebrities, the death of the struggling author will come along with the death of our literature. We are not just behind in math and science—our youth are being poisoned by the terrible choices made by our publishing companies.

Countries like Afghanistan, Chile, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Peru, Spain, Sri Lanka, and Sweden are producing better literature than we are.

Dr. Carlos T Mock is a native Puerto Rican who resides in Chicago, IL and Three Oaks, MI. He has published four books and is the GLBT Editor for Floricanto Press in Berkley, CA. He contributes columns regularly to Windy City Times in Chicago, Ambiente Magazine in Miami, Camp Newspaper in Kansas City. He's had several OP-Ed published at the Chicago Tribune. Inducted in the Chicago Gay & Lesbian Hall of Fame October 18th, 2007. He can be reached at: http://www.carlostmock.com/





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