https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/till-eternity
On 2025-07-15, James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/till-eternity
| A number of SF authors pursued careers like Brunner’s: early
| prodigious output of competent pulp, a middle ambitious period,
| the grim realization that readers had no interest in rewarding
| their hard work with a commensurate increase in income, embittered
| disenchantment, and a return to their origins, albeit with better
| prose and plotting.
I'll bite: What other authors followed such a career trajectory?
In article <[email protected]>,
Melissa Hollingsworth <[email protected]> wrote:
Verily, in article <1055vk9$a6t$[email protected]>, did >>[email protected] deliver unto us this message:Oh, Anthony worked out very early that writing books like Macroscope
In article <[email protected]>,
Christian Weisgerber <[email protected]> wrote:
On 2025-07-15, James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/till-eternity
| A number of SF authors pursued careers like Brunner�?s: early
| prodigious output of competent pulp, a middle ambitious period,
| the grim realization that readers had no interest in rewarding
| their hard work with a commensurate increase in income, embittered
| disenchantment, and a return to their origins, albeit with better
| prose and plotting.
I'll bite: What other authors followed such a career trajectory?
Piers Anthony is one. Robert Silverberg is another.
It's always a bummer to be reminded that there are more people who like >>predictable tropes than who like creative literature.
I liked some of Piers Anthony's more ambitious work. I believe it's all >>Xanth all the time now. Of course, he's also fairly old and may just see >>this as semi-retirement.
is hard and pays poorly, whereas cranking out endless crap like Xanth
is easy and pays well. He was quite frank about it in early interviews.
Verily, in article <1055vk9$a6t$[email protected]>, did
[email protected] deliver unto us this message:
In article <[email protected]>,
Christian Weisgerber <[email protected]> wrote:
On 2025-07-15, James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/till-eternity
| A number of SF authors pursued careers like Brunner�?s: early
| prodigious output of competent pulp, a middle ambitious period,
| the grim realization that readers had no interest in rewarding
| their hard work with a commensurate increase in income, embittered
| disenchantment, and a return to their origins, albeit with better
| prose and plotting.
I'll bite: What other authors followed such a career trajectory?
Piers Anthony is one. Robert Silverberg is another.
It's always a bummer to be reminded that there are more people who like >predictable tropes than who like creative literature.
I liked some of Piers Anthony's more ambitious work. I believe it's all
Xanth all the time now. Of course, he's also fairly old and may just see
this as semi-retirement.
On 2025-07-15, James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/till-eternity
| A number of SF authors pursued careers like Brunner’s: early
| prodigious output of competent pulp, a middle ambitious period,
| the grim realization that readers had no interest in rewarding
| their hard work with a commensurate increase in income, embittered
| disenchantment, and a return to their origins, albeit with better
| prose and plotting.
I'll bite: What other authors followed such a career trajectory?
I liked some of Piers Anthony's more ambitious work. I believe it's all
Xanth all the time now. Of course, he's also fairly old and may just see
this as semi-retirement.
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