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JackBludis Male
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JackBludis is now friends with Chris Casey, ephraim leo, Laura Elvebak and 2June 26
New Pulp Press and JackBludis are now friendsJune 26
Cormac McCarthy is the greatest prose stylist in American literature. Compare the rococco style of Blood Meridian (which Harold Bloom cites as the best American novel) to the simpler style of his later, more popular books. Yes, read the Orchard Ke...
It might be the death of the bestseller as we know it. It may mean though that everything will be "midlist" to no-list.
I doubt that we will ever see the demise of the printed book, although we may see some of the bigger pubs opt out of the market when sales begin to decline and portable electronic readers become commonplace. I think it is the small to medium publi...

Profile Information

Hometown:
Baltimore
About Me:
Jack Bludis is the author of more than 40 published novels, and about 400 published stories in various genres and subgenres. His best works are private-eye mysteries set in various historical periods.
I Am A:
Writer
Website:
http://Jackbludis.com
Books And Authors I Like:
Chandler, Hammett, Ed McBain, Hemingway, Faulkner, Joyce, James Lee Burke--The Road, by Cormac McCarthy; and, indispensible for a writer, "Strunk and White's, The Elements of Style." And how did I forget Will Shakespeare the first time around?
Movies And TV Shows I Like:
Raines and Studio 60 (RIP), 30 Rock, House, Casablanca, Maltese Falcon, Murder My Sweet, the Godfather I, LA Confidential--Favorite Network TCM and AMC
Saturday Night Live--although I don't get the humor anymore, it's an age thing. This show for 30 years has kept up with what 20somethings are laughing at. It has also turned out some damn good actors as well as comedians.

I just saw the new Hairspray and it's the most fun I've had in a movie theater in years.

CONFESSIONS OF A HACK

My ex-wife, who is now my very good friend, once called me a "Magnificent Hack." By that, I assumed that she was either damning me with feint praise of praising me to damnation.

After all these years, I finally agree with her. A hack I am, it seems, and I suppose a hack I will remain--unless my latest book, which has taken me almost a year to write does something big. (I usually finish a first and sometimes final draft in little more than a month. I have finished books that I sold in less than a week.)

My first ego booster came over 30 years ago when I was in college when my "Advanced Creative Writing" instructor said of our first efforts--and I have to paraphrase from memory. "A number of these pieces were good, but one ..." He shook his head and clicked his tongue, then read my first effort "Sunday on the Rhine" which became the springboard for my first Atlantic Monthly submission.

I'll share something here which I am sure many writers have experienced. (It's happened to me twice, once recently.) I was rejected, of course, what first efforts aren't? But the last line of the rejection, which they must have been using forever and probably still are, was, "You write with a facility that has held our attention." That's the kind of thing that kept me going until I sold my first book to an editor who said, "I like the book, but a need a cleaner manuscript." (Take heed new writers.)

Sometimes today, I will look at a line or a paragraph or a story or even an entire novel and think, "This is crap," or "This is terrific." There's never an in between. Ironically, I'll often think the same thing at different times about the same line, paragraph, etc.

Since this is a confession, I'll stop here and tell you that I've taken time out of my best writing day of the week, Saturday, to procrastinate again at the ending of my "Big Book," that one that I've been writing for almost a year.

Oh, yeah, about that hack thing: For while, I was publishing one piece of crap after another, and selling most of what I sent out. Unfortunately, for me, what I think is my best stuff never gets published, or hasn't so far.

The book I'm working on has been through several cycles in twenty years. Once, I even an agent even called me out of the shower on Sunday morning to tell me I had a bestseller on my hands--two weeks later, he decided not to handle it.

In a mid-90s reincarnation of the same book, an agent agreed to handle it. She sent out what I had sent her, the book minus 100 pages in the middle. She claimed she liked it. She seemed never to notice that it had continuity problems.

I've been nominated for The Shamus for my Paperback Original "Shadow of the Dahlia," and for both the Shamus and Anthony for my short story, "Munchies."

So far, they are my greatest claim to fame under my own name. I've even earned good reviews for my crap, almost all of which I wrote under names I'll never tell you about.

So much for procrastination.

As my escaped African Gray parrot used to say, "Time to Go to Work."

Jack Bludis, 3-24-07

P.S. I currently have a story "Blondes, Blondes, Blondes," at ThrillingDetective.com -- it's free to you, and I did get paid for it.

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JackBludis

CAN VOICE BE TAUGHT

In one sense, voice cannot be taught, just as good writing
cannot be taught, but it can be learned.

I think voice is developed from writing thousands upon
thousands, even millions of words, and of course reading
more words than we write.

Summary: Voice can't be taught, unless the student has the
ability to learn, but I think most learn it by
assimilation.

Posted on August 1, 2007 at 6:49am — 5 Comments

JackBludis

Cormac McCarthy

Two of the last three books that I have read "The Road" and "No Country for Old Men." And they are probably THE two best books I have read in the last twenty years.



The style is unique, but well planned. The text conversational complete with some phonetic spelling, regionalisms,

Continue

Posted on May 25, 2007 at 11:00pm — 18 Comments

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At 2:06am on June 9, 2009, Dave Zeltserman said…
Thanks, Jack. I haven't updated my list in a while . If I had I would've added Derek Raymond, Westlake's "The Axe", Shane Stevens "Dead City", Roger Smith's "Mixed Blood" (he's become a friend, but independent of that I absolutely loved both Mixed Blood and his upcoming second book).
At 1:07pm on June 4, 2009, Jan Christensen said…
Thanks, Jack. You are always so supportive, and I appreciate it.
At 3:01am on June 4, 2009, Scott Phillips said…
yep, I meant Vicki....
At 1:07am on June 4, 2009, I. J. Parker said…
Thanks for the appreciative note on my comments. I shoot my mouth off these days and get things stirred up a bit. Seriously, this is a wonderful place and I love almost all the posts and posters.
At 8:31am on June 3, 2009, I. J. Parker said…
Jack, it's always nice to hear from you. You do recall riding to that crazy Texas Barbecue place together years ago? I was scared out of my wits by the illustrious Bouchercon experience. Several years later, in Chicago, I had a great time because I really didn't give a damn about playing the author. These days, I don't give a damn about much of anything.
At 3:07am on June 3, 2009, Kris Neri said…
Post it, Jack. I think it's good to stimulate discussion. Though I tried to keep it balanced, I thought my remarks might anger some. So be it.

Kris
At 7:59am on June 2, 2009, Reece Hirsch said…
Thanks, Jack. Congratulations to you on your 40 published novels. That's quite a feat! Reece
At 6:24am on April 25, 2009, Ellen Norton said…
Thanks for the nice comment about my photos. Yes, I love my house! It looks like we enjoy the same networks - TCM & AMC - are there any other stations! Very nice to meet you. Ellen
At 8:38am on April 9, 2009, Eve said…
I'm reading a history of Welsh witcraft.
At 9:35am on April 1, 2009, Donna Carrick said…
Hi, Jack, thanks for the note! I enjoy the forum. It's great to hear what other writers are thinking and get an idea of what's happening in the genre. Sounds like you've been "hacking" longer than I have, but I have kept my fondness for Dickens all through the years.
 
 

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