World's Smallest Essay on the Coming Miniaturization
of Literature
by Jason Sanford
The other day, a well-known author was presented with that
oft-asked and irritating question, "What advice do you
have for new writers?" Her reply: "Make sure what you
have to say is worth reading, because our libraries
are being filled up by minutia."
According to industry statistics, more books than ever
are being sold, but these massive sales numbers are
being reached because of fewer and fewer authors.
Stephen King. John Grisham. Nora Roberts. Forget everyone else.
minutia (noun). A minute or minor detail.
When Ann Godoff, the respected head of the Random
House Trade Group, was recently fired, it wasn't
because she hadn't made money for her corporate
bosses. It was because she hadn't made tons and tons
of money. As the New York Times wrote, "The old
assumptions of book publishing that it earned modest,
steady profits built on a respected stable of authors
and a deep backlist now seem practically
prehistoric."
Forget the midlist those books that sell around 10,000
copies and take years to find a readership.
Forget that the midlist is precisely where the
modestly bought heart and soul of literature lives.
If James Joyce were alive today, "Ulysses" would be a
midlist book. Why would anyone publish it when they
could make a fortune off the new Tom Clancy
novel instead?
Etymology of minutia:
The word comes from several Latin words including
"mintiae," meaning petty details; "mintia," meaning
smallness; and "mintus," meaning small. Minutia dates
from around 1751 right smack in the middle of the
scientific revolution.
The old joke is that specialists learn more and more
about less and less until they know everything about
nothing, while generalists learn less and less about
more and more until they know nothing about
everything.
How about another choice besides two different types
of the same minutia?
The scientific revolution changed how people thought
about themselves. Human knowledge became abstract.
Truth could be empirically tested, proved, or
disproved. The world was seen as a giant machine and
could be broken down into tiny pieces.
Into minutia.
Most common advice in MFA creative writing programs:
"Show, don't tell."
The world is growing smaller every day and not in the
"it's a small world after all" vision of Walt Disney or a
treehugger's "we're all neighbors in an interconnected
web of life." Instead, it is becoming more and more
possible to find out anything about everything. Want
to know if God exists? Type the request into a search
engine and you'll get a million different places
promising God's address on a silver platter.
Why read literature to understand the world when you
can just Google it instead?
Second-most common advice in MFA programs: "Write what
you know."
The scientific revolution, writ large, began with Nicolaus
Copernicus saying the sun is the center of the
solar system. Along the way, Isaac Newton went from
apples to gravity, and later Charles Darwin evolved, Albert
Einstein discovered that we are all energy, and Dr.
Jonas Salk produced a polio vaccine.
That's all I know about the scientific revolution.
None of it is minutia.
The top scientific story of 2002,
as decided by the
American Association for the Advancement of Science:
"The discovery that molecules called 'small RNAs'
control much of a gene's behavior." (This may further
research on cancer and stem cells.)
I don't doubt that this discovery is true or that
it'll one day change all our lives. But you would have
to be a genetic expert to understand any of this.
Does this mean that the science which now shapes our
lives on a daily basis will never be understood by
more than a few experts?
Just as fewer and fewer people understand scientific
discoveries, fewer and fewer people read literature.
Soon, most authors will be writing their stories and
poems for fellow writers and a few select readers.
Imagine the scientific peer-review system where
scientists write about their discoveries in language
that can only be understood by other scientists. Apply
this to literature.
In fact, literature is already a peer-review system.
When was the last time you walked up to an airport
magazine stand and bought a copy of the Southern
Review? No one reads literary journals except for
writers wanting to be published in those publications.
One final minutia:
The well-known author from the start of the essay is
not famous her books are rarely read outside of the
literary world. But writers know her, and she swears
she was misquoted in her response to that oft-asked
and irritating question, "What advice do you have for
new writers?"
Her true response: "Make sure what you have to say is
worth reading, because our libraries are being filled
up by the minute."
Nothing ever really fills up. There is always room for
more minutia.
E-mail Jason Sanford at lapthai at yahoo dot com.