Writing and Rent
n+1, a magazine of literature, politics and culture, has teamed with publisher Faber & Faber to release two to three books of nonfiction a year. The first is MFA vs. NYC: The Two Cultures of American Fiction (paperback, $16), edited by Chad Harbach (The Art of Fielding), which explores the ways in which writers from writing programs succeed or fail in New York publishing. The idea arose from an essay Harbach wrote in 2010 about the two-headed system that has grown from nationally dispersed writing programs and a concentrated Manhattan publishing industry ("albeit one in which the two heads are always chatting and bickering and buying each other drinks"). Lest that sound a bit high-toned and insular, much is self-deprecating, like Eli Evans when he realized that his $10K fellowship really didn't call for a money manager. Maria Adelmann's two post-college years in New York are remembered as "one long day in a windowless room," her space decorated with reminders of the life she wasn't living.
But the writers are serious about their subject: a writer working and working, "trying both to pay her rent and to put the way she feels into words." There are many pitfalls in both endeavors, which are often wildly incompatible, along with a "literary" bias against MFA graduates--uninspired, derivative, no brilliance. Harbach says, "A writer can be ruined by school--by a too-great desire to emulate her peers or please her teachers. She can be ruined by the publishing industry--by trying to anticipate what the masses, or Manhattan editors, want to buy. She can be ruined by her poverty, or her parents. Or she can find her way." The contributors to MFA vs. NYC are here to help her find her way. --Marilyn Dahl, editor, Shelf Awareness for Readers



