Saturday, October 18, 2008

Late Bloomers

Malcolm Gladwell writing in The New Yorker on a subject close to my heart: late bloomers. An excerpt:

Ben Fountain’s rise sounds like a familiar story: the young man from the provinces suddenly takes the literary world by storm. But Ben Fountain’s success was far from sudden. He quit his job at Akin, Gump in 1988. For every story he published in those early years, he had at least thirty rejections. The novel that he put away in a drawer took him four years. The dark period lasted for the entire second half of the nineteen-nineties. His breakthrough with “Brief Encounters” came in 2006, eighteen years after he first sat down to write at his kitchen table. The “young” writer from the provinces took the literary world by storm at the age of forty-eight.

2 comments:

Eclecticity said...

Check this out. Haven't read it yet, but it is on my wish list. First novel at 90. There's all kinds of time?

http://www.amazon.com/Bowl-Cherries-Novel-Millard-Kaufman/dp/0802143962/ref=wl_it_dp?ie=UTF8&coliid=I1JGPABVEV088Z&colid=18FTJODQUM7H2

Michael Wade said...

Thanks for the title. I've heard about the author. An inspiration to all of us late bloomers.