Wifetheif
Experienced
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2012
- Posts
- 750
I just finished "Remember, Remember" by Charles Beaumont published in 1963 by MacMillan in the chapter "The Bloody Pulps" Here is a daunting fact that proves not even the most prolific of us or the one among us who composes the longest most expansive universes is fit to even touch the garments of the old-timers working for a penny a word in the pulps. The greatest pulp writer may very well have been Walter B. Gibson who wrote TWO complete Shadow novels EVERY MONTH for close to two decades! He typed so hard and so furiously on his manual typewriter, that when he finished a novel every one of his fingers was blistered. A fortnight of healing and he did it all over again. Year in year out. Here is the money quote from Beaumont's book," ...but each of the 178 book length-ers 7,500,000 words of print were turned out by Maxwell Grant." (Gibson's pen name)
I know the great Depression was a teriffic motivator to find work and keep it once you found it but MY GOD! Gibson was turning out so much material that they began hiring other writers behind his back lest he step in front of a bus or something.
Whats the biggest work in terms of word length you have turned out?
Who is our most prolific author?
Haw many Lit.com writers have cracked the million word barrier if any?
It there a pulp writer whose works inspired your own career?
This should be a fun discussion
I know the great Depression was a teriffic motivator to find work and keep it once you found it but MY GOD! Gibson was turning out so much material that they began hiring other writers behind his back lest he step in front of a bus or something.
Whats the biggest work in terms of word length you have turned out?
Who is our most prolific author?
Haw many Lit.com writers have cracked the million word barrier if any?
It there a pulp writer whose works inspired your own career?
This should be a fun discussion