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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index

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To: Jill who wrote (186435)2/25/2009 11:03:11 AM
From: PoetRead Replies (1) of 306849
 
While i respect your opinion as a writer, I must disagree with you vis a vis the internet as an appropriate place to publish-- and read-- literature. I'm the managing editor of an international online magazine of the arts, now celebrating our tenth anniversary. Our last issue has received almost a half million unique visitors-- this is a greater readership than any print literary magazine in the world, other than a select few. Our readers include everyone from high school students to very well-known writers (Orleans herself is a fan and we've got her endorsement on the site.)

I think perhaps there's an age divide wrt doing serious reading online. Many of my over-50 age peers don't read much online. I now get emails regularly from well-known writers asking advice as to how to enter what is now a world dense with electronic literature.

All the best literary magazines-- AGNI, Paris Review, etc. etc. now have electronic elements. And many have introduced electronic submissions. It's the direction things are flowing. Very few lit. mags pay when they publish poetry. i always laugh when i place a poem and get a $25 check; then months later get a tax form from the IRS. This (as i know you know!) is why so many of us must support ourselves with other kinds of writing. It's why I do literary interviews and write for health and cooking magazines.

As to making a living at editing one of these? Eh, not so much. ;-) I know editors who are fortunate enough to be paid a living wage to edit, but there aren't many. Literature has been is, and always will be, separate from the marketplace. I'd even argue it *must* be, in order to ensure the freedom of thought and action necessary to make it.
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