Dragaera

Authors and their produce

David Rodemaker dar at horusinc.com
Fri Dec 6 15:42:41 PST 2002

> On Friday, December 6, 2002, at 06:15 PM, Ruhlen, Rachel Louise 
> (UMC-Student) wrote:
> 
> >
> >
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: Ken Padgett [mailto:kpadgett1 at cox.net]
> >> Sent: Friday, December 06, 2002 4:37 PM
> >> To: dragaera at dragaera.info
> >> Subject: Authors and their produce
> >>
> >>
> >> It occurred to me as I was devouring The Paths of the Dead,
> >> that an Author might be a bit ambivalent about his works
> >> finally being released. I am sure there must be a feeling of
> >> great satisfaction, especially, as seems to be the case here,
> >> when the Readers find the fruits of his labor to be sweet. To
> >> the left, after the Author has spent some months or years (or
> >> decades in the case of some Historians)toiling over his
> >> manuscript, that sweet fruit is consumed in mere hours,
> >> leaving the Reader with (if I may mix the metaphor) an
> >> unquenchable thirst for more. How does this delicate calculus
> >> of satisfaction of a job well done against the thunderous and
> >> immediate calls for the next work balance in the Author's
> >> mind? Perhaps if the Author would deign to comment, I would
> >> cease to wonder and move to, if not knowledge, at least
> >> cessation of wondering.
> >
> > Hrm. I think it's enough I was able to underrstand the above, without
> > trying to talk in it. I can write scientific papers which is nearly the
> > same thing. (Nearly, in the sense that Paarfi uses it.) Speaking of
> > which, I wondered if the publication of a book is similar to the
> > publication of a scientific paper. It all begins with the experiment.
> > After much labor, usually involving tearing one's hair out (literally 
> > in
> > the case of a fellow student of mine who has a habit of twisting her
> > hair when she's worried, which actually leaves a bald spot), and
> > shedding tears and blood (as the mice bite you), one finally gets some
> > exciting data. It is exciting not only in its own right, as it confirms
> > something previously not known or only suspected, it is all the more
> > exciting because after months, or even years, of frustrating ambiguous
> > results and that evil stuff "method development", it is the first (but
> > hopefully not the last) actual data. All that remains is to write it up
> > and publish it, right? Wrong. Usually it can't be written up until you
> > are sure of the results, which means you have to repeat it, and if you
> > want it published in a *good* journal you also have to repeat it in
> > different ways, so as to confirm that the finding is not an artifact. I
> > imagine this is analogous to the revising & polishing of a novel. Then
> > you can actually write it. Not all the excitement is lost because at 
> > any
> > point after the initial data, you can begin presenting your data at
> > meetings, in the form of posters or short seminars. Now I have 
> > something
> > written and am waiting on just one tiny last bit of data to be 
> > collected
> > before I can submit the paper. Hopefully the tiny last bit of data will
> > be what we have every reason to expect it to be, and I won't have to
> > actually rewrite half the paper, but can slip it in where it belongs.
> > Then we can submit the paper, it will hopefully be accepted although 
> > not
> > likely without revisions, and after months sending it in, revising it,
> > sending it around to all the co-authors for approval, revising it, etc,
> > it will finally be published. This, by the way, is data I mostly
> > collected 3 years ago (except for that one bit I'm waiting on).
> > Oh. That sounds like a rant. Well, I feel better!
> > Rachel
> >
> If I may say so myself, excuse me for speaking completely out of turn, 
> for I am but an ill mannered Teckla from beyond the City, I would enjoy 
> having new vistas opened for inquiry if the Author speaks the fruits of 
> his mind, for I am taken to wonderment and relish any chance to further 
> my skills in this delightful task.

Fruit? SKZB and Fruit? Really...

What *kind* of Fruit?

Oh. Sorry, wrong context.

Nevermind.

David