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Author Topic: Read and Discuss Here The Story Behind MASH  (Read 187 times)

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Read and Discuss Here The Story Behind MASH
« on: July 13, 2010, 11:11:46 AM »

The Story Behind MASH
13 July 2010, 9:04 am

   Books in the Douglasville, Georgia Borders store. Image via Wikipedia    In publishing,  you never know. Such was the case with Richard Hooker’s MASH,  the novel that spawned an award-winning movie and a TV series that  seemed to run forever. It took the author eleven years to write and the  literary  agent eight years to sell it. When the novel was submitted  to  me I was an editor at William Morrow. I later learned it had been shown  to something like 32 publishers. I did not know there were that many  publishing houses and that I was so low on the publishing food chain.I read it over a weekend and roared and gave it to a colleague  who had served as a Marine during the war (WW II) and had landed and  invaded several islands in the Pacific and managed to survive. He  laughed too. Instead of having a committee of readers consider it, which  I believe had been the novel’s undoing, I decided to make a princely  offer of $5,000. It was eagerly accepted, considering the novel’s  history.

Image of Alan Alda taken at the World Science ...Image via Wikipedia  I sent it to Ring Lardner Jr. who read it, loved it and gave the  book a great quote although he said he is not in the business of  writing blurbs for a living – but he did write for the movies and  eventually wrote the movie script. The novel was then sent by the  William Morris Agency to Ingo Preminger who decided it was high time for  him to compete with his brother Otto, a successful movie director, who  hired Robert Altman to direct it. The TV series followed with Alan Alda  playing Hawkeye Pierce, a character based on the author’s experiences in  Korea. I always wanted to meet Alda and tell him he owed me one.

The novel’s timing went against all the rules of sensible  publishing. It appeared at the tail end of the Vietnam war, which had  become an immensely unpopular conflict and was set during the Korean  War, which everyone wanted to forget. The author, a thoracic surgeon,  received relatively little money for the movie rights. However, when it  was made into a TV series, each time it was aired he received a residual  equivalent to  the money he earned for a surgical operation. The  author’s actual name was H. Richard Hornberger, MD. His pseudonym,  Richard Hooker, was named after his prowess as a golfer.

The moral: More often than not book publishing is totally  unpredictable, like participating in a  lottery. So keep pounding those  computer keys if you are a writer. You never know.

Tip submitted by Hillel Black, free lance editor of over 20  NY Times best sellers and member of the Consulting Editors Alliance.  Visit http://www.hillelblack.com/.



Source: Author Marketing Experts, Inc.

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