Monday, October 18, 2010

An Interview with Paul Harding from The Good Men Project Magazine by Perry Glasser

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

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