5 Feet of Fury

Shame is the new fame

Today’s piece in the Observer is essentially about how agent Eric Simonoff tried to make it seem like publishers were clamoring to buy the James Frey novel —  while really they were just vaguely curious to see whether it was any good. It closes with a quote from the man who got an exclusive on the project and bought it for a still-undisclosed but apparently large amount of money: Harper publisher Jonathan Burnham. ‘The point is he’s written a great novel, and by summer of 2008 people will be able to approach [fraudster “novelist”] James Frey with a clearer mind. Time will have passed.’ Well, of course he’d like to think so. Does anyone else?

“‘I don’t like the tone of that,’ said one editor at a commercial house. ‘It suggests that it is the “people” who have the problem, i.e. they need a “clearer mind” in order to see the true value of James Frey’s writing. The man is a liar and a fake. He may be a good writer — it’s not like you have a be a good person to be a good writer. Actually, most writers are horrible people. At the same time, I would have felt icky about paying someone that shady 7 figures. Does morality have any place in a bottom-line business? I’m not sure anymore.'”