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Vanity Fair's How a Book is Born: The Making of The Art of Fielding
 
 

Vanity Fair's How a Book is Born: The Making of The Art of Fielding [Kindle Edition]

Graydon Carter , Keith Gessen
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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The highly anticipated novel The Art of Fielding, by Chad Harbach, has just been published. But what is the riveting story behind the story—and what does it take to make a bestseller these days? As author and n+1 co-founder Keith Gessen reveals in this 17,000-word e-book (expanded from the article appearing in the October issue of Vanity Fair), the passage from MFA classroom to national book tour is its own treacherous, absorbing—and wildly unpredictable—adventure. Harbach, Gessen’s friend and colleague, was a struggling writer who toiled relentlessly for ten years on The Art of Fielding, before it eventually hauled in a $650,000 advance. At each step of the way several vivid characters fought tooth and nail to ensure the book’s survival, including Chris Parris-Lamb, Harbach’s passionate young agent; Michael Pietsch, a renowned editor at the publishing house Little, Brown; and Keith Hayes, the book’s tireless designer. In this e-book of sweeping scope and fascinating, behind-the-scenes detail, Gessen pulls back the curtain on the insular, fiercely political, and cutthroat literary world of Manhattan—a place where the “Big Six” publishing houses, owned by multinational conglomerates, reign supreme, while smaller houses are left to fend for themselves. Gessen exposes the modern-day book business for what it is: a largely uncertain enterprise—but rife with courageous, enthusiastic individuals—struggling to redefine itself in the face of its own digital revolution.

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Keith Gessen's article, Vanity Fair's How a Book is Born: The Making of The Art of Fielding, is expanded from a piece that appears in the October 2011 issue of Vanity Fair. It reveals the haphazard process of turning a manuscript into a book.

If you've ever read about how an author becomes published, you'll know that luck plays as big a role as talent and perseverance. There is no by-the-numbers guide for how to get your book published, because every book seems to take a different path.

This is the story of The Art of Fielding, a first novel that is currently on the New York Times bestseller list and is getting very good critical reviews. That it is a "good" book is hardly a guarantee that it would be published, let alone be a bestseller.

Gessen's narrative emphasizes the quirky characters that populate the book industry. Author Chad Harbach sent his book to dozens of agents and publishers for ten years, until finding the one agent that loved it. Gessen also tells of the designer who created the artwork for the hardcover and had to change it half a dozen times to please everyone. Then there's the publishing consultant who has "zany" opinions about where the book industry will be in the next decade.

Considering the state of flux the publishing industry is in now, The Art of Fielding took a fairly traditional road to being published, going through agents and publishers and eventually an auction for the rights.

Self-publishing and ebooks are not part of the story of The Art of Fielding, but according to Mike Shatzkin, the publishing consultant Gessen writes about, once people migrate to e-books, there's no turning back. He predicts the demise of half the traditional publishers, most of the physical bookstores, and virtually all of the public libraries in the next fifteen years.

I thought the Kindle Single version of the article would be little more than a padded version of the magazine article, but it appears that there's some real added content. The story of the book jacket design is new to the Single and the section about Shatzkin is beefed up. You don't have to be a would-be author to find this article pretty gripping.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I read this e-article about the publishing history of "The Art of Fielding" before I read the novel. Article first, novel second or novel first and article second, the order doesn't make much difference. This is a stand-alone. It's interesting reading even if you aren't interested in picking up the novel.

"How A Book Is Born," as the title suggests, is the back-story and publishing history of the novel the "Art of Fielding," the 10-year effort to write it and the adventure and struggle in getting it published, which it eventually was and for a moneybag filled with $650,000. The article is nonfiction with most all the drama and narrative drive of a good piece of storytelling.

Keith Gessen and "Fielding" author Chad Harbach are cronies and co-editors at the hip journal "n+1." Their long-time personal relationship is important. It gave Gessen the inside scoop as the novel gestated just as it gave him access to the business of books at the very time the paradigm is shifting and the future of publishing is as unstable as it is uncharted.

For me what made this e-article worth reading (this Kindle Short is pretty much a reprint from an October 2011 "Vanity Fair" piece "The Book on Publishing") is the glimpse it gives inside book publishing in the age of e-commerce where no one seems to have anything close to a good formula for success and where more often decisions seem to be seat-of-the pants choices that can give shape to either success or failure, as defined by number of hardcover and digital books sold.

Publishing today is a $14 billion business (in annual sales and that doesn't count educational materials or textbooks) in an imprecise world where "No two books are the same book and no two authors are the same author. The fact is: no one has any idea how many copies of a book will sell."

Trying to figure what will sell a book involves everything from typeface to cover design. "The Art of Fielding" went through more than a dozen drafts of cover art before the final jacket, an all-text design with stylistic white letters on a deep blue background. And what's interesting is that none of the versions carried a visual reference to baseball. That apparently wouldn't be good for sales. The cover is intended instead to convey the novel's "depth and warmth." How it does that is beyond me.

This is a rags-to-riches tale about a guy who couldn't pay his college loans who writes a book that's now on the bestseller lists and a story about book publishing in the digital age, where everything is uncertain and job security a perilous commodity. I don't know which of those two stories is better. I enjoyed "The Art of Fielding" for its grace and humanity and for being a very good story told well. I liked "How A Book Is Born" for its ample insight and inside look at an uncertain business.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Leah
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
This long article is more about the book publication process in general, from agent to editorial acquisition to marketing and design, than it is about Chad Harbach and his novel THE ART OF FIELDING. Harbach's success is an atypical case, and author Keith Gessen downplays this while explaining the rigorous process of publication with a traditional publisher. Gessen contrasts traditional publishing with the modern e-publishing process and raises thoughtful questions about the future of books.

Any writers interested in the publishing process will find a succinct and realistic take on it here. In the end, I wanted to know more about Harbach and the long slog of writing FIELDING, but Gessen never delves too deeply into Harbach's personal story or offers much insight into *why* Harbach's novel became the crown jewel in Little, Brown's Fall 2011 list. Still, this is a fine overview of the steps toward publication, sprinkled with pithy and often mordantly cynical anecdotes from agents, editors, and other industry insiders.
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