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Meg Waite Clayton

New York Times Bestselling Author

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May 25, 2009 By Meg Waite Clayton

Just in Case You're Thinking It's Time to Give Up

How long should you stick to writing if you’re not meeting with quick success?
I’ve just read an interview with Cynthia Ozik in The Writer’s Chronicle. The interviewer is Dana Gioia, and I’d love to link to it, but it doesn’t appear to be available online. It’s definitely worth tracking down and reading, though, especially if you’re thinking that the years you’ve put in without yet getting that first novel published are an indication of your talent, or lack thereof.
Ms. Ozick says in the interview that she started her first novel, eventually nicknamed Mipple, at age twenty-one (which, doing the math from other things in the article, was about 1949). “[I]t wound on and on for so long” that she “continued to suck on” it for seven years, breaking off at one point to write a comic novel that “at this moment … must be languishing among the cobwebs in some London publisher’s cellar.” Then, prodded by a notice for a novella contest and thinking she “might just toss one off before returning to the seriously exalted work of Mippel,” she started what she refers to as “my third first novel,” Trust.
That novella grew to eight hundred pages over another seven years, and was finally published in 1966. Which, by my math (subtracting 1949 from 1966), is about seventeen years after she started writing novels.
Ms. Ozick has gone on to publish another four novels and seven story collections, in addition to essays and other nonfiction. She’s been shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize and a finalist for the National Book Award, and she has won both the Rea Award for the Short Story and the PEN/Malamud Award.
Just in case you’re thinking it’s time to quit because you’ve been writing without getting published for … how many years has it been? – Meg

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Meg Waite Clayton

Meg Waite Clayton is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of THE LAST TRAIN TO LONDON, a Jewish Book Award finalist based on the true story of the Kindertransport rescue of ten thousand children from Nazi-occupied Europe—and one brave woman who helped them escape. Her six prior novels include the Langum-Prize honored The Race for Paris and The Wednesday Sisters, one of Entertainment Weekly's 25 Essential Best Friend Novels of all time. A graduate of the University of Michigan and its law school, she has also written for the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The San Francisco Chronicle, Forbes, Runners World, and public radio, often on the subject of the particular challenges women face. megwaiteclayton.com

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