Dan Wickett, whose Emerging Writers Network is the newest addition to our blogroll (it sports a substantial library of interviews and reviews), has just gone live with this interview with Knopf editor Gary Fisketjon.
Dan: Can you describe your editing style or process? How do you think you've changed in the past twenty or so years?Gary: Reading more carefully than any sane person ever would, and noting anything and everything that doesn't seem up to the book's own highest standards. It's like having a very detailed conversation with the
writer, and giving him or her the opportunity to see the book afresh, or through someone else's eyes, with
a view toward making it the very best it can be. It takes me a long time, probably about an hour to get
through five pages, which adds up on books of five- or six-hundred pages, but it's the best way for me to
discover what the author's really up to, and also a way of paying my own dues, since I'm mistrustful of
people who glance at a book and come up with big, sweeping ideas that probably have less to do with the
author's intentions than the editor's preferences, which don't mean a thing. If I spend weeks and weeks editing a manuscript, and show care and attention to the process, a writer will tend to believe my notes are worth looking at. I don't think I've changed in this respect in the least since the very beginning, though I hope I'm a little better at it.
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