Timothy McSweeney's Header Image

Through this Friday, all available back issues of Wholphin are half off—10 bucks apiece for countless warm evenings of rare films, featuring Miranda July, Paul Rudd, Donald Trump, and a monkey-faced eel.

- - - -

A N O T H E R   I N   A   S E R I E S
O F   L E T T E R S   T O   J O S H ,
A N   A S P I R I N G   W R I T E R ,
F R O M   H I S   C O U S I N ,
J O H N   H O D G M A N ,
A   P R O F E S S I O N A L
 L I T E R A R Y   A G E N T .


- - - -

December 5, 1999

Dear Josh,

You haven't written in some time, so I thought I'd drop a line to let you know that I spied your poems at the on-line journal, www.doppelganger.com. Was the one about "the sky's dark heart" about me? It seemed like it was.

I'm glad to see that you're still pursuing your writing, even though no one reads poems, or journals, or on-line journals. The real money is still in books. There are many kinds of books, as you no doubt know. But specifically, I'm talking about novels, by which I mean thrillers. Have you thought about writing one of those? If so, I'd suggest that you first concentrate on composing a good story.

A "story" is something an author creates in order to generate interest in his novel from movie producers. For this reason, it is critical that the story can be described very quickly, preferably in one sentence of no more than 16 words. For example:

"John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald meet in hell and team up to assassinate Satan."

This story follows the time-honored structure of all stories: exposition ("John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald"); complication and foreshadowing ("meet in hell and"); rising action ("team up to"); and climax ("assassinate Satan"). There was a time that a denouement or a moment of reflection would follow the climax. This is no longer necessary.

The smart author, after considering his story, will ask this question: is it good? So it is often a good idea to brainstorm a number of stories and test them against a focus group. This can be done easily. For example, the above-mentioned story was submitted via e-mail to a number of disinterested parties, along with two alternative stories:

"John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald meet in hell and team up to assassinate God."
"John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald meet in hell and team up to assassinate all the dead presidents."

The parties were asked a simple question: which is the best story? And because some of the parties were writers, they were reminded that all three stories remain in perpetuity the exclusive intellectual property of the sender, and that the parties would not be compensated for their input. It is important to note this at all times, because writers are greedy and thieving and sly.

The results were surprising. Only 22% agreed that "Satan" should be the object of assassination. 36% preferred "God." And 42% picked "presidents."

The numbers speak for themselves, but it is important to balance them with common sense. One respondent pointed out that God could not be assassinated for, as well all know, God is dead. Absolutely correct. And of course, the answer could not be "presidents," because then the story would consist of more than 16 words—in this case, a completely unmanageable 19!

Some respondents suggested even more story alternatives, including the idea that because neither Booth nor Oswald were actually assassins—rather, patsies in the machinations of shadowy conspiracies among bankers and ex-military officers and mean women—they should simply be portrayed as bungling goofballs who are helplessly in over their heads (ie. a "buddy comedy"). Such elaborations upon your original story idea should be discarded: they were not requested, conspiracy stories are now hopelessly dated, and they violate your artistic vision. It's not surprising in this case that the more creative respondents were writers, and they will be promptly sued.

So it turns out that the correct response is:

"John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald meet in hell and team up to assassinate Satan."

This is true...
a) because you may now write your hero as a tough-talking, does-things-his-own-way, recently-fallen angel (think Mel Gibson for the movie, or Harvey Keitel?) who must earn his ticket back to heaven by stopping Booth and Oswald, even though he hates Satan and wouldn't mind if they succeeded—this adds "depth" to your story, which some like if it doesn' t get in the way of a good story; and...
b) because it was your first idea. You'll find that your first idea is almost without exception the best, and the opinions of others should really only be courted to make them feel useful.

Now that you have the story in place, the novel practically writes itself. Although you do technically need a writer to pose for photos and appear at signings. Which is why I'm writing you, Josh. Kindly submit your first draft chapter outline and character breakdown for "Sic Semper Satan" by the end of next week. Please note that you will not be compensated for this work, and that the entire contents of this letter remain my personal and inviolable intellectual property. I look forward to reading your work!

That is all.

Your cousin,

John Hodgman
Professional Literary Agent

PS: Don't write any more poems about me.

 

 

OTHER McSWEENEY'S STORIES:
- - - -


Accurate or Nearly Accurate Utterances Overheard at Theaters Showing Today's Most Popular Feature Films, Presented as a Matching Game By Gregory Galloway
Open Letter to Antidisestablishmentarianism By Eric McHenry
A D'Agostino Supermarket Receipt Found Left Inside a Copy of Denis Johnson's "Jesus' Son" by the Previous Person to Check It Out of the Library, Presumably Used as a Bookmark, and Perhaps Shedding Some Light on the Type of Person Who Reads This Book, or Perhaps Not (With Commentary) By Francis Heaney
There Is No Average Day When You Live in a Port-A-Potty By Todd Butterfly Pruzan
Eat the Document By Cathy Alter

- - - -

MAIN PAGE   |   ARCHIVES

 

Memories of Amanda Davis

 


Red dot denotes content that is new today.

Black dot denotes newish content.

McSWEENEY'S STORE

SUBSCRIBE TO:
McSWEENEY'S
THE BELIEVER
WHOLPHIN

FUTURE McSWEENEY'S BOOKS

THE AMANDA DAVIS HIGHWIRE FICTION AWARD

INVITE A McSWEENEY'S AUTHOR TO SPEAK IN YOUR TOWN OR COLLEGE

THE BEST AMERICAN NONREQUIRED READING

McSWEENEY'S MONTHLY MAILING LIST

McSWEENEY'S-RELATED EVENTS AND VARIOUS TOUR DATES

ORDER INQUIRIES AND ADDRESS CHANGES

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
FOR BOOKS
FOR THE QUARTERLY
FOR THE WEBSITE
FOR WHOLPHIN

McSWEENEY'S INTERNSHIPS

CONTACT US

- - - -

LETTERS TO McSWEENEY'S

LISTS

McSWEENEY'S PREDICTS

McSWEENEY'S RECOMMENDS

NEW WHOLPHIN FILM

DAN LIEBERT, VERBAL CARTOONIST

JOKES BY BRIAN BEATTY

REVIEWS OF NEW FOOD

DISPATCHES FROM MOSCOW

SO YOU WANT TO BE PRESIDENT?

DISPATCHES FROM THE ANACOSTIA

THE WINNER'S CIRCLE WITH ERIC FEEZELL

BEN GREENMAN'S FAKE CELEBRITY MUSICALS

DISPATCHES FROM A HUMANITARIAN JOURNALIST

DEB OLIN UNFERTH'S SICK OF THE REVOLUTION

DISPATCHES FROM IRAQ

SHORT IMAGINED MONOLOGUES

PHILIP GRAHAM SPENDS A YEAR IN LISBON

STAINED TEETH: A COLUMN ABOUT WINE

DISPATCHES FROM THE NAPOLEONIC WARS AT THE MET

KEVIN DOLGIN TELLS YOU ABOUT PLACES YOU SHOULD GO IN EUROPE

SONGS OF ENEMIES AND DESERTS: LIVING WITH THE SUDAN LIBERATION ARMY

LAWRENCE WESCHLER'S EVERYTHING THAT RISES: A BOOK OF CONVERGENCES

THE CONVERGENCES CONTEST

ABOUT WHAT IS THE WHAT

ABOUT BOWL OF CHERRIES

ABOUT COMEDY BY THE NUMBERS

ABOUT JOHN BRANDON'S ARKANSAS

ABOUT MICHAEL CHABON'S MAPS AND LEGENDS

ABOUT UNDERGROUND AMERICA

ABOUT DEB OLIN UNFERTH'S VACATION

LETTERS FROM AN EARTH BALL TO, OR CONCERNING, SEAN HANNITY

DISPATCHES FROM ADJUNCT FACULTY AT A LARGE STATE UNIVERSITY

ADVICE FROM A PERSON WITH A BACHELOR'S DEGREE IN PSYCHOLOGY

DISPATCHES FROM THE NBA ENTERTAINMENT LEAGUE

JOHN MOE'S POP-SONG CORRESPONDENCES

B.R. COHEN'S ANNALS OF SCIENCE

INTERVIEWS WITH PEOPLE WHO HAVE INTERESTING OR UNUSUAL JOBS

OPEN LETTERS TO PEOPLE OR ENTITIES WHO ARE UNLIKELY TO RESPOND

DISPATCHES FROM A PUBLIC LIBRARIAN

MICHAEL IAN BLACK IS A VERY FAMOUS CELEBRITY

DISPATCHES FROM ROY KESEY, AN AMERICAN GUY MARRIED TO
A PERUVIAN DIPLOMAT LIVING IN CHINA


DAN KENNEDY SOLVES YOUR PROBLEMS WITH PAPER

STEPHEN ELLIOTT'S POKER REPORT

- - - -

ADDITIONAL MATERIAL