When Paul Harding’s Tinkers was first published, the novel was greeted with deafening silence. After years of rejections from almost every major publishing house, Tinkers, about a New England man’s recollections and memories of his father, finally found a home at Bellevue Literary Press. Harding struggled to get Tinkers on the publishing establishment’s radar; he was an unknown writer, and Bellevue was a small press with little to no advertising budget. Worse, it was a novel about the male experience—and everyone knows men don’t read books. If nobody would so much as review it, how good could it be?Read the full interview here. See also: All Aunt Hagar's Children, Dogwood, Alice Adams
Monday, October 18, 2010
An Interview with Paul Harding from The Good Men Project Magazine by Perry Glasser
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