Jane Austen: Fourteen Years of Rejection

April 21st, 2009 by me

I just read a wonderful piece in The Literary Review that says, in the context of a review of a new book about Jane Austen:

“In 1797, Thomas Cadell made one of the greatest mistakes in publishing history. A Hampshire clergyman had written to him, offering a three-volume novel for publication by a first-time author. Without a word of encouragement, Cadell declined the book, manuscript unseen, by return of post.

Unfortunately for Cadell, the clergyman was the Revd George Austen, soliciting publication on his daughter Jane’s behalf, and the novel in question was an early version of Pride and Prejudice, recently voted the one book that the British nation can’t do without. It would be another fourteen years before Jane Austen saw her first novel in print…”

You can read the full review, “Austenmania,” in the British Literary Review, not the America one that I hold in high esteem for many reasons, including the fact that they published my first short story. Enjoy! – Meg

Posted in Author Stories, Meg's Posts

One Response

  1. Guest Blog – Meg Waite Clayton : Adventures in Writing

    [...] mostly written by the authors themselves, about how much persistence it takes to break into print. Even Jane Austen faced rejection: it was fourteen years – yes, fourteen! – from the day Pride and Prejudice was first [...]

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About 1st BOOKS: Stories of How Writers Get Started

If you think writers are born rather than made and brilliant writing is recognized immediately, those rejection slips for your novel—or story or nonfiction query, or (heaven help you) letter to your own mother—can seem a daunting thing. The truth is getting started as a writer takes hard work, persistence, and a bit of luck.