I work it from the other end: I have a short list of authors that resonate with my preferences most excellently. No matter HOW fast they write, they can’t keep up with my reading speed, so I’m force, FORCED I tell you, to either re-read (I do that some) or try new-to-me- authors who are, by Sturgeon’s law, at least 90% crap.
Gotta give credit to Caulfield for his efforts and argument, though I don’t expect that even he thought he’d win. Of course Mrs. Olsen could have informed him that his report had to be 10 pages long so that he could show a bit more respect to the author.
Carl Hiaasen spends weeks and weeks writing a single book. But it doesn’t matter; he knows what he’s doing and they’re all good.
At his peak (roughly 1599-1606) Shakespeare was writing two or three new plays in a year, including many of his greatest works. Your average college Shakespeare instructor puts more time and effort into reading Shakespeare’s work than Will ever put into writing them.
Another bad assumption. You divide the time that the author (or director, or show runner) spent on the work (rarely “years and years”) and divide that by the number of people who consume that work. But this kid is often not very bright.
I read VERY quickly. My wife is even faster. She read Robert Jordan’s “The Eye of the World”, a 782 page hardcover, start to finish, while we waited in line to get it signed. Robert Jordan nearly strangled her. Three years of his life, read WHILE IN LINE. Clearly he felt it was disrespectful (or horrifically depressing) and sided with Caufield in this.
Having a one-page book report written about one of my stories would actually be kinda nice, if I knew about it. As it is, I have to content myself with book reviews, many of which are so badly written I can’t tell if it’s critical or complimentary. No matter, I’ll keep writing as long as there’s at least one person who enjoys my little tales.
Bill Bryson (who is a friend of Jef’s) wrote “A Walk In The Woods” (about walking the AT Trail with some humor thrown in) and is the one I’ve gone back to the most; probably considered light reading … but certainly enjoyable.
terrapin6000 Premium Member 2 months ago
A Very Calvin approach . Love it
GreasyOldTam 2 months ago
Lots of things are like that. I once spent the better part of a month building a prop for a play. The prop was on stage for less than two minutes.
Concretionist 2 months ago
I work it from the other end: I have a short list of authors that resonate with my preferences most excellently. No matter HOW fast they write, they can’t keep up with my reading speed, so I’m force, FORCED I tell you, to either re-read (I do that some) or try new-to-me- authors who are, by Sturgeon’s law, at least 90% crap.
Rhetorical_Question 2 months ago
Write the book report?
Bilan 2 months ago
And then there are books like On The Road that reads like it was written in one sitting. But it still came out great.
sandpiper 2 months ago
Caulfield seems to feel he isn’t getting credit for his efforts to grandstand. Mrs. Olsen just rides with it, as usual.
Kidon Ha-Shomer 2 months ago
Caufield a future community organizer/social influencer/politician???
BJDucer 2 months ago
Gotta give credit to Caulfield for his efforts and argument, though I don’t expect that even he thought he’d win. Of course Mrs. Olsen could have informed him that his report had to be 10 pages long so that he could show a bit more respect to the author.
Doug K 2 months ago
Does she know how much time he spent on that rant?
Nope.
Charles 2 months ago
An author who spends years writing a single book generally won’t be successful. Tolkien excepted, of course.
royq27 2 months ago
Condensing time…
prrdh 2 months ago
Just one more example of spending more effort trying to avoid a task than it would take to perform it.
rshive 2 months ago
Caulfield’s work probably deserves a more specific reaction.
fritzoid Premium Member 2 months ago
Carl Hiaasen spends weeks and weeks writing a single book. But it doesn’t matter; he knows what he’s doing and they’re all good.
At his peak (roughly 1599-1606) Shakespeare was writing two or three new plays in a year, including many of his greatest works. Your average college Shakespeare instructor puts more time and effort into reading Shakespeare’s work than Will ever put into writing them.
DaBump Premium Member 2 months ago
Could have used that time to write the report, yes.
eced52 2 months ago
She doesn’t care.
Cactus-Pete 2 months ago
Another bad assumption. You divide the time that the author (or director, or show runner) spent on the work (rarely “years and years”) and divide that by the number of people who consume that work. But this kid is often not very bright.
CrazyCanuck75 2 months ago
I read VERY quickly. My wife is even faster. She read Robert Jordan’s “The Eye of the World”, a 782 page hardcover, start to finish, while we waited in line to get it signed. Robert Jordan nearly strangled her. Three years of his life, read WHILE IN LINE. Clearly he felt it was disrespectful (or horrifically depressing) and sided with Caufield in this.
calliarcale 2 months ago
She knows you too well, Caulfield — she knows you could extemporize that rant without any preparation whatsoever. :-D
8arkay 2 months ago
Having a one-page book report written about one of my stories would actually be kinda nice, if I knew about it. As it is, I have to content myself with book reviews, many of which are so badly written I can’t tell if it’s critical or complimentary. No matter, I’ll keep writing as long as there’s at least one person who enjoys my little tales.
JacquieBanks Premium Member 2 months ago
Bill Bryson (who is a friend of Jef’s) wrote “A Walk In The Woods” (about walking the AT Trail with some humor thrown in) and is the one I’ve gone back to the most; probably considered light reading … but certainly enjoyable.
brick10 2 months ago
In the time you could have written two book reports ….
Mary McNeil Premium Member 2 months ago
More time than it would take you to just do the dang book report, smart guy !
billdaviswords 2 months ago
A lot of really good and best-selling authors crank out 2 or 3 books a year. However, most mortals…