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A Dangerous Profession: A Book About the Writing Life [Paperback]

Frederick Busch (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 2, 1999 0767903986 978-0767903981
Frederick Busch, one of America's most distinguished novelists, has had an enduring love affair with great books and with the difficult, and sometimes personally dangerous, work that is required to produce them. For Busch, as he writes of his own career and those of his great elders, Dickens, Melville, Hemingway, and others, there was to be no other recourse save the dangerous profession. Writing out of an experience of risk that is suffused with affection, Busch brilliantly explores the hazards of the writing life and its effect on the achievement of benchmark writers.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Part memoir, part literary criticism, novelist Frederick Busch's A Dangerous Profession could serve as a warning to post on the door of every creative-writing program in the nation. Take, for instance, Busch on the glamour of the writer's life: "Yes, the thrill of rising at 5:30 a.m. and writing in the dark cold, or typing late at night after jobs that eat our hearts and livers..." Or Busch on the literary marketplace: "Something that is part of the gift is also a compulsion: that we seek the darkness, not the light; that we serve up grindings of glass in blood sauce rather than the Fifth Avenue soufflé most readers want." Or, finally, Busch on the attitude of the world at large to writers: "...we are the enemy."

What drives people to an activity so manifestly difficult, unprofitable, and against common sense? The author of 21 books, Busch illustrates the ancient need to tell stories by reflecting on writers as varied as Melville, Dickens, Kafka, and Graham Greene. Busch is a perceptive reader as well as an accomplished writer, and it's a pleasure to read criticism so clearly passionate about books as art and not just ideas. The most moving part of A Dangerous Profession, however, is that in which Busch meditates on his own sources of inspiration, including the complex and elusive figure of his own father. There is a little bit of oh-pity-the-suffering writer here, but not a lot--and, in fact, much more of oh-pity-the-suffering-writer's-wife (husbands not included, since Busch doesn't have one). Eclectic, witty, and never less than stunningly written, A Dangerous Profession is a memorable tribute to the rewards as well as the rigors of the writing life. --Mary Park --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Thought-provoking, honest and carefully considered, this reminiscence by novelist, critic and teacher Busch (Girls; Closing Arguments) will enhance any writer'sAor reader'sAreference library. The 16 chapters examine both quality fiction (Dickens, Melville, Thoreau, Hemingway, Graham Greene, John O'Hara, etc.) and Busch's writing life. Although Busch's reflections about other writers are spot on ("As ever, Dickens writes of memory; as ever, he seeks to state a long grudge or wound and then forgive or heal it; as ever, he cannot quite succeed"), what really galvanizes the reader are Busch's observations about writing as a career and his career in particular. The most rewarding essay here ("The Floating Christmas Tree") is a near flawless retrospective of his marriage, his early career and his sense of promise ("It was a most excellent Christmas because we were what we had dreamed to beAin love and undefeated in New York"). In a similar vein is his almost penitential description of the writer's wife: "Writers' wives are those women who not only receive the hourly report of shifts in the weather of the soul; they are the women to whom vows are made with as much frequency as to the wives of gamblers, alcoholics, drug addicts, and politicians." Busch captures the struggle to create worthwhile fiction while also earning a living by doing so: "money is a letter from the world to an author about his work." Think of a more cerebral version of Anne Lamott's Bird by Bird and you'll have some notion of this valuable hybrid, which combines heartfelt memoir with an ardent love of literature.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 245 pages
  • Publisher: Broadway (November 2, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0767903986
  • ISBN-13: 978-0767903981
  • Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #697,860 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Busch gets inside the writer's mind, September 1, 2000
This review is from: A Dangerous Profession: A Book About the Writing Life (Paperback)
The very title is a challenge. "A Dangerous Profession." About writing? What's so dangerous? Suffocation by towers of manuscripts? Rejection of your work by editors? Paper cuts? Who does Frederick Busch think he is; Richard Branson?

No, what this university author's talking about in this collection of pieces are those writers who take risks with their works. Not to write the next potboiling, page-turning best-seller, but something more lasting and more personal. These are writers who live out their lives according to a sort of literary DNA, doing what they must at whatever cost to themselves.

There's Herman Melville, who felt himself finished at age 33 because the book he believed in, "Moby Dick," had earned him "the scorn of reviewers -- they questioned his sanity as well as his skill -- and, by the end of his life, a total of $157." There's Graham Greene's exquisite career writing about how we betray love, loyalty, ourselves. Or, as Busch puts it: "follies were his subject matter, finally -- how, in love, we betray the beloved; how, worshiping God, or a god, or a hope of one, we betray that hope or wish; how, striving to do good, we cause damage."

There's Charles Dickens, whose "David Copperfield" is nothing less than a novel about writing and the power of the written and spoken word can hold over its audience. The novel is also a reflection of the man himself, who carried on stage readings of his works that would leave him exhausted and probably hastened his end. That's writing capable of killing.

But Busch doesn't sustain the promise implied by the title, so the book's not a dirge. He leavens it by including essays on bad popular writing and bad literary criticism, memoirs recalling his early literary career, and a short humorous look at the writer's life from the point of view of the (usually) long-suffering wife.

It's tough to explain to someone who doesn't write why putting words on paper can be so difficult, why writers can turn into divas in their self-absorption and why those who work so hard to become so good seem capable of sacrificing so much. Busch's look at the writing life reminds us why it is so.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars intellectual nourishment, October 31, 1998
By 
ihh@webtv.net (Hollywood, Florida) - See all my reviews
If you care about writing, if you care about reading, if you want to be exposed to the mind of a man of warmth and exceptional writing talent, than this is a book for you. Frederick Busch will take you on a journey into the mind of one writer: Frederick Busch. He will recount parts of his life with honesty. You will feel comfortable with this very human being. Whether he is writing about his father and his farther's war or his is disecting his own and the writing of others, this book is a treasure of technique, passion, disappointment and love. Read it.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a clear deep-mind book on writing and writers., November 9, 1998
By A Customer
You could'nt ask for a more rewarding book to read period.It just happens to be about writers and writing and the the serious craft it is for some and the tough devotion they have to it and how it is life itself and even death for a few.Mr.Busch takes you down to unheard of depths of skills brilliant writers mull in their heads before commiting to paper.A fine,fine book.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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THE MAPS IN THE 1945 West Publishing Company pocket diary that my father carried in the war are gathered at the end of the little leather book. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Dangerous Profession, David Copperfield, Leib Goldkorn, Bleak House, Lady Dedlock, Dejah Thoris, John Carter, Lizzie Bean, Steinway Restaurant, Princess of Mars, Charles Dickens, Ellen Ternan, Leslie Epstein, Pleasant Riderhood, United States, World War, Folk Tales, John Harmon, Wall Street, Albert Einstein, Benito Cereno, Captain Vere, Terrence des Pres, Widow Water
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