• Home
  • Reviews
  • Essays
  • Wimsey
  • Fiction
  • Bio

What is this?
It's Bill Peschel's professional and personal home on the web. Welcome. Poke around in the drawers and cupboards. There's a lot of interesting stuff here.
What's the Reader's Almanac?
It's my 2008-2009 nonfiction book project. A year's worth of entertaining and thought-provoking stories and anecdotes about writers and their books, tied to the day they occurred. Published regularly. Here's a list of the essays published so far.
Why is it on the web?
I don't have an agent or a contract, so this is my way of building an audience, and seeing if there's any interest in the book. The daily deadlines don't hurt, either.
Are you going to write anything else here?
Sure. The occasional book review, a collection of links to neat articles and websites, and my opinions. You know, the usual stuff you find on the web.

Recent Reader's Almanac Posts
Saturday Literature Links
Thoreau makes an ash of himself (1844)
Dickens leaves the United States, gratefully (1842)
Uprisings and Downfalls: Troy, Sherlock Holmes, the Irish Rebellion and Brendan Behan
A Merry Shakespeare (1597)
Petrarch: Just one look (1327)
Writers at Play: Brendan Behan and Jackie Gleason
Writers at Rest: Henry James


Recent Reviews
The Unscratchables. Cornelius Kane.

Pim & Francie: The Golden Bear Days. Al Columbia.
Mostly Harmless. Douglas Adams.
Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop. Lee Goldberg.

Search


Advanced Search


<< Gomer Pyle Coleridge (1793) | Home | Great Moments in Magazine History (1860, 1887, 1953) >>

December 01, 2008

Battling Book Titles (A ‘Writers 365’ Bonus)


On this day in 1850, novelist Elizabeth Gaskell expressed concerns about her publisher Edward Chapman's choice of title for her next title:
My dear Sir,

I do not at all like the title you have chosen. . . May it, please, be December Days, which is much more suggestive of the quiet tone of the story. . . . I will disown that book if you call it The Fagot; — the name of my book is December Days —

Yours very truly,

E. C. Gaskell
Eventually, they compromised on "The Moorland Cottage." Not that it helped matters. In a letter to another publisher a few years later, Gaskell admitted that while she was paid a royalty and given 2,000 copies of her novel, the publisher had lost money on the deal.

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.

Bookmark on del.icio.us Bookmark on Digg Bookmark on Facebook Bookmark on Fark Bookmark on Google Bookmarks Bookmark on NewsVine Bookmark on Reddit Bookmark on Slashdot Bookmark on StumbleUpon Bookmark on Technorati Bookmark on Windows Live Bookmark on YahooMyWeb

1 comment about

'Battling Book Titles (A ‘Writers 365’ Bonus)'

I finished the Moorland Cottage a few days ago.  I can’t imagine why anyone would want to call it either The Fagot or December Days. Rosemary, Gaskell’s original title, makes more sense, considering the ending, but I think they ultimately agreed on the best title for the book.

Posted by JaneGS on 12/02
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.

Copyright 2010 by Bill Peschel
Powered by Expression Engine