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5Q5nQ.jpg (2457×1266) Cultural genome project mines Google Books for the secret history of humanity. What can the first how-to book for fiction still tell us? - By Paul Collins. In the fall of 1895, thousands of Brits were wracked by a painful and embarrassing affliction: rejection slips. Britain, it seems, was a nation of cracked Kiplings and ham-handed Hardys. “The number of persons who are now engaged in writing fiction,” the Glasgow Herald estimated, “[is] somewhere between fifteen and twenty thousand.” For them, the publication that year of Jude the Obscure and The Time Machine meant far less than the appearance of a whole new kind of book: How To Write Fiction. Published under the pen name “An Old Hand,” How To’s anonymous author was a “well known novelist”—a man who, the Herald assured readers, might open “a new prospect for those would-be novelists who are annually rejected in their thousands.” The introduction to the book promised to give readers the clarity of long experience—not some youth whose “work will appear like a picture in a stereopticon that is out of focus.”

How To Write Fiction, though, was the genre’s first avowed how-to guide. The Best Novels You’ve Never Read - Book Hunt 2007. Foreign books that have received less attention than they deserve : books. 100 Notable Books of 2010 - Holiday Gift Guide. XBmDF.jpg (600×8721)