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INDEX

Advertising, Can a Writer Write? Calkins, 48
Agent Advises Beginners, An, Tucker, 87
Agricultural Journalism, Duncan, 211

Allen, Eleanor, How Important Is the Critic, 175
Auld, Madeleine Swift, Building a Story, 65
Authors, Contemporary, 53, 95

Back to Cinderella, Notes about Story Beginnings,

161

Barrington, E., Maury, 53

Bailey, A., Writing to System, 294

Barton, Bruce, If There Were a Tax on Talk, 315
Bond, Annette D., The Quality Magazines, 103
Bonham, Jean Lucille, Dreams for Sale, 61
Book Reviews, 36, 75, 114, 154, 189, 295

Browne, Edythe Helen, Do You Know How to Use
Literary Scissors? 285

Burr, Walter, The All-American Circus, 241
Calkins, Ernest Elmo, Can a Writer Write Adver-
tising, 48

Censorship, Evans, 262

Chapman, Katharine Hopkins, Use and Abuse of
Dialect, 137

Chapman, Maristan, The Writer's Workshop, 177,
The Store Cupboard, 204

Chesley, Charles H., How to Keep Track of Manu-
scripts, 292

Cinema, Whither? Kennedy, 196

Clark, A Bess, Locating the Mason and Dixon Line
in Language, 242

Criticism, Creative, Kiener, 269

Crook, Kile, The Ultimate, 20

Curley, William, The Founder of Short-Circuitism,

239

Davis, LeRoy G., Just What is Literature, 65
de Brienne, Guy, Certain Among Them, 102
Dialect, Use and Abuse of, Chapman, 137
Dickens, Charles, Letters from. 121

Dilley, James L., Free Lance Writers I have Known,
268

Dreams for Sale, Bonham, 61

Duncan, Clyde, Agricultural Journalism, 211
Editorial, 22, 62, 100, 140, 170, 208, 237, 266, 289, 322
Editor's Suggestion, How It Helps, Johnson, 325
Editors in New York, Snaring, Woolley, 221
Emmerich, Regina, For the Trade Journal Writer,

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325

Journalism, Agricultural, Duncan, 211

Kennedy, William D., The Manuscript Club Idea, 1,
41, 90, Humor or Treason, 112, Notes on Narra-
tive Technique and Form, 124, Lindbergh's
Flight, 193, Whither Cinema? 196, On Song Writ-
ing, 249, Women and Their Magazines, 280
Kiener, George A., Creative Criticism, 269
Lane, Ovid C., The Filmland Screen, 21
Lindbergh's Flight, Kennedy, 193

Linton, Lulu, Avaunt, Realists! Oklahoma and New
York Join in Pleas, 324

Literary Articles in Periodicals, 31, 74, 111, 153, 185,
220, 248, 276, 302, 332

Literary Scissors, Do You Know How to Use,
Browne, 285

McCord, David, A Shanty for Publishers, 166
McGowan, Daniel J., Jr., Upon Reading "Berceuse
Ariettes," 240

MacKay, Constance D'Arcy, Writing and Placing the
Children's Play, 130

Magazines, Women and Their, Kennedy, 280

Manuscript Club Department, 265, 326

Manuscript Club Idea, The, Kennedy, 1, 41, 90

Manuscript Clubs, The, 67, 139, 173

Manuscript Clubs. The Value of, Ray, 141

Manuscript Market, The, 25, 69, 106, 146, 179, 215, 243,
271, 298, 327

Manuscripts, How to Keep Track of, Chesley, 292
Maury. Jean West, E. Barrington, 53
Measuring Sticks, 32, 186

Mind, The Ingenious, Richardson, 81

Mitchell, George Winter, Editors and Schools, 144
Moody, Margaret, Farm and City Child, 24
Mundell, Charles S., Persistence in Writing, 142
Newcomb, C. W., Was Your Aunt an Author? 24
News and Notes, 29, 73, 111, 151, 185, 220, 248, 276, 301,
332

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Short Story, Realism in the, Hooper, 269
Short Story Writer, The Equipment of, Fagin, 93
Sinclair, Van Buren, Literary Flickers, 19
Smith, Bertha W., Zona Gale, 95

Smith, Maude Sumner, What Will Be the Significant
Things for 1927?

Song Writing, On, Kennedy, 249

Stewart, E. C., The Friendly Critic, 145

Store Cupboard, The, Chapman, 204

Stories, Better Film, 252

Story, Beginning the, Volney, 157

Story Telling as an Aid to Story Writing, Trachsel,

283

Story, The Trick of the Gripping, Ray, 205
Subscription Book Clubs, The, 168

Swift, Ivan, Pressing the Public, 202
Style and Vocabulary Test, 136

Tanner, William M., Writing the Familiar Essay,
277. Writing the Informal Personal Sketch, 311
Talk, If There Were a Tax on, Barton, 315
Trachsel, Myrtle Jamison, Story Telling as an Aid
to Story Writing. 283

Tucker, Gertrude Brevoort, An Agent Advises Beginners, 87

Turner, Ann Price, More about Ben Ames Williams, 105

Versatility Prize Contest, 303, 333

Volney, Dex, Beginning the Story, 157
Vox Clamantis in Deserto, Wheelock, 97
Waite, L. S., Note-Taking, 267
Warwick, Jean, Reading It Over, 176
Watts, Julia, From Another Hillside, 319
Werner, W. L., How to Write a Poem, 128
Wheelock, John F., Vox Clamantis in Deserto, 97
When the Tail Wags the Dog, Emmett. 133
Whitaker, Robert, An Unrealized Realism, 64
White, William Allen, Mary White, 305
Whitehead, Henry S., A Few from the Chest, 258
Wickham, Harvey, Selling Points, 260
Wilder, Doris R., Chimney Sweeps, 293

Wildey, Alice, Help Me Escape! A Story Quick, 142
Women-Writers, Playing Lot's Wife with, Johnson,

290

Woolley, Edward Mott, Snaring Editors in New York, 221

Writers, Stimulants for, Fagin, 213

Writing and Placing the Children's Play, MacKay, 130
Writing for Pay. Young, 291

Writing, Persistence in, Mundell, 142
Writing Poetry for Fun, Holbrook, 323
Writing the Familiar Essay, Tanner, 277

Writing the Informal Personal Sketch, Tanner, 311
Wyatt. Neal, Original Copy, 174

Young, Willa B., Writing for Pay, 291

CAN AUTHORS' MONTHLY FORUM J

Volume 39

BOSTON, January, 1927

The Manuscript Club Idea

By WILLIAM D. KENNEDY

It has undoubtedly been that, while our T has undoubtedly been noted by many

editorial policy has been constructive in matters of technique and markets as they affect the individual writer, it has so far been frankly destructive or noncommittal toward all the agencies which offer their services to the writer and toward any "movement" in literature. I choose the beginning of a new year as an appropriate time to announce a change of policy, or rather the introduction of an added policy, which may have important consequences on the character of this magazine.

However sound the advice on technical problems, and however accurate and up to date the information concerning markets offered to writers in magazines and books, he who works alone, outside the circles which revolve around the publishing houses and editorial offices of large cities, does, it must be admitted, labor under disadvantages. Especially does he suffer from lack of unbiased critical opinion of his work. This need is vital.

"The successful writer often does not know whether or not he has succeeded in conveying the thought he intended," comments Mr. Arthur Sullivant Hoffman, editor of "Adven

Number I

ture," in his book, "Fundamentals of Fiction Writing":

"Naturally enough," he says, "authors are inclined to a kind of reversed ostrich habit. If a point was clear to them when they wrote it, they take for granted that it must be clear to the reader. They forget that they have full knowledge of all that is or happens in their fiction, while the reader can know only what comes to him from the printed page. Often when an editor points out an unclearness they argue with him, blissfully ignoring the fact that the editor is himself a reader and that the reader found it unclear. Possibly the author proves his case that is, he points out other passages in the story which do clear up the unclearness, if the reader remembers them and makes the correct inferences and connections. The fact that, in the actual test, these passages failed to produce the intended results on the reader slides off the author like water off a duck. Still less does he get the idea that a reader should n't be distracted from the story by being compelled to go into a more or less complicated reasoning process in order to get what should have been handed to him on a platter. Even if several editorreaders found the point unclear, he stands. by his guns."

Short Story, Realism in the, Hooper, 269
Short Story Writer, The Equipment of, Fagin, 93
Sinclair, Van Buren, Literary Flickers, 19
Smith, Bertha W., Zona Gale, 95

Smith, Maude Sumner, What Will Be the Significant
Things for 1927?

Song Writing, On, Kennedy, 249

Stewart, E. C., The Friendly Critic, 145

Store Cupboard, The, Chapman, 204

Stories, Better Film, 252

Story, Beginning the, Volney, 157

Story Telling as an Aid to Story Writing, Trachsel,

283

Story, The Trick of the Gripping. Ray, 205
Subscription Book Clubs, The, 168

Swift, Ivan, Pressing the Public, 202

Style and Vocabulary Test, 136

Tanner, William M., Writing the Familiar Essay, 277. Writing the Informal Personal Sketch, 311 Talk, If There Were a Tax on, Barton, 315 Trachsel, Myrtle Jamison, Story Telling as an Aid to Story Writing, 283

Tucker, Gertrude Brevoort, An Agent Advises Beginners, 87

Turner, Ann Price, More about Ben Ames Williams, 105

Versatility Prize Contest, 303, 333

Volney, Dex, Beginning the Story, 157
Vox Clamantis in Deserto, Wheelock, 97
Waite. L. S., Note-Taking, 267
Warwick, Jean, Reading It Over, 176

Watts, Julia, From Another Hillside, 319
Werner, W. L., How to Write a Poem, 128
Wheelock, John F., Vox Clamantis in Deserto, 97
When the Tail Wags the Dog, Emmett. 133
Whitaker, Robert. An Unrealized Realism, 64
White, William Allen, Mary White, 305
Whitehead, Henry S., A Few from the Chest, 258
Wickham, Harvey, Selling Points, 260
Wilder, Doris R., Chimney-Sweeps, 293

Wildey, Alice, Help Me Escape! A Story Quick, 142 Women-Writers, Playing Lot's Wife with, Johnson, 290

Woolley, Edward Mott, Snaring Editors in New York, 221

Writers, Stimulants for, Fagin, 213

Writing and Placing the Children's Play, MacKay, 130
Writing for Pay, Young, 291

Writing, Persistence in, Mundell, 142
Writing Poetry for Fun, Holbrook, 323
Writing the Familiar Essay, Tanner, 277

Writing the Informal Personal Sketch, Tanner, 311
Wyatt, Neal, Original Copy, 174

Young. Willa B., Writing for Pay, 291

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