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A Writer Speaks

Last night, The American Spectator's hosted its annual Washington dinner. Here is the speech one of our longtime writers -- who did speak at our 2008 dinner -- meant to deliver this year.

Editor's note: Last night, The American Spectator hosted its annual Washington dinner. Here is the speech one of our longtime writers -- who did speak at our 2008 dinner -- meant to deliver this year.

Thank you everyone for letting me have a few moments of your time at this wonderful event.

I'm sure some of you may remember last year at this very podium I proposed marriage to my fellow writer Stephanie Gutmann just after Justice Alito spoke. Although many people suggested it, we did not ask Justice Alito to preside at our wedding. But I am happy to report that on August 8 Stephanie and I were married at her parents' house in Vermont with a justice of the peace presiding. We're now living happily together in Piermont, New York, overlooking the Hudson. Stephanie and her father, David Gutmann, a well known psychologist, and his cousin Ben Watternberg, with whom I'm sure you're familiar, are all in the audience tonight.

After speaking last year for a few brief moments, it occurred to me that I'd like to say something about the writers for The American Spectator, who are, after all, ultimately what the magazine is all about.

Writing is a strange profession. I came to it very late myself. I only started writing for a small newspaper when I was 28 and I still remember the thrill I got at seeing the first obituary I wrote in the paper the next day. Like everyone else, I spelled "cemetery" wrong the first time as well.

I started writing about planning boards and zoning boards and arguments over siting local recycling centers and soon began to marvel at the people who wrote about really big issues like energy and environmentalism for national magazines. What a life they must lead! I could see that some of the ideas they wrote about were things I was mulling over in my own mind. Soon I decided to take the big gamble, quit my job and try to write a book on one of these subjects. One thing led to another and within two years I found myself on the cover of Harper's magazine with a story that was one of the first major critiques of environmentalism.

I was in heaven. I confess I still had to pinch myself now and then at the idea that I was consorting with famous editors I had always read about and appearing in a magazine read by hundreds of thousands of people.

I say all this because I want to note that in all this dizzying climb it never occurred to me whether I was ever going to make a living at this. I just assumed that the people whose names appeared regularly in national magazines and who wrote books -- books, for heaven's sake! -- were comfortably well off.

I remember I began to have my doubts when I met a certain writer who used to hang out in Harper's who wore elegant British clothes and a top hat even, and had a very elegant British manner, and who regularly turned out short pieces of elegant prose for the magazine. I began to notice that he was always wearing the same suit of clothes. Then I began to notice that the clothes were rather shabby. I remember one day realizing -- and by the way, this was not Tom Bethell, although I suppose it could have been -- I remember noticing that this particular British cravat that he was wearing was almost completely worn through.

I began to wonder, "What kind of profession is this I have entered?" There were other eccentrics -- a writer who lived on a family farm down in Arkansas, another who had pioneered a crumbling brownstone neighborhood a few blocks from a violent housing project in Brooklyn. These were not the comfortably successful lives I had imagined for those names I read in the magazine every month.

Then I began to notice little clues that I probably should have picked up along the way but somehow missed. I read The Hunchback of Notre Dame after breezing through the Classics comic in grade school. One of the main characters -- whom I'd forgotten entirely -- is Gringoire, a young poet who has written a mystery play for All Fools' Day. He tries to get the actors started but they want to wait until the bishop arrives. When the bishop arrives, he gives a speech and goes off and the crowd follows him. Then when the players finally begin, some beggar gets up on the stage and starts clowning and what's left of the crowd wants to watch him instead of the mystery play. By this time I had written a play that I had labored mightily to be performed before a few scant audiences and I knew exactly what Hugo was talking about.

Then later in the book, Gringoire ends up captured with a bunch of gypsies and is brought before the King to be executed. He makes one last desperate speech on his behalf. "Why do you want to execute me?" he asks, "I'm only a writer. Writers have never amounted to anything, even the most successful. Homer spent his whole life begging for meals on the Greek Islands. Euripides spent his last years living in a cave. It is only long after they are dead that they ever receive any recognition and then some publisher reaps the rewards. Writers are harmless. We never amount to anything." And of course, his life is spared.

Now I read all this in my adulthood and I say to myself, "Wait a minute. How did I miss all this? Whatever was it gave me the impression that writers were all rich and famous, that people who wrote books sat there counting the money as their royalties rolled in? Why is it that my agent, who is now hawking my own books, is telling me, 'Don't worry, you'll never collect any royalties. The only money you'll ever see is the amount the publisher is foolish enough to give you as an advance.'"

And this was all before the advent of the Internet!

With the Internet we can now safely say that the marginal value of the written word is inexorably headed toward zero. People are now happy to write for free! Everybody in the world is a daily columnist on Facebook. I once met a poet in a bookshop who told me there were more people writing poetry than reading it. Now soon that's going to be true for every kind of writing! Even prestigious newspapers can't survive. How is the poor freelance writer who thinks his opinions are worth something ever going to keep body and soul together by scribbling something every day on a "blog"?

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About the Author

William Tucker is the author of Terrestrial Energy: How Nuclear Power Will Lead the Green Revolution and End America's Energy Odyssey.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (5) | Leave a comment

Bill| 11.20.09 @ 7:51AM

This was a great article. Very telling. As an average man I work 8 to 10 hours a day providing for my family. I don't have time to always search out the truth on every subject, I rely on writers such as yourself, I depend on you. I read, and I must say taht sometimes I trust too much what I read, but I am always looking for the truth. It just so happens that I find what I believe to be the truth on web pages like the American Spectator and The American Thinker. The truth is everything. The labor in getting the truth may not always be recognized by th0se that subscribe, and that is unfortunate. I now have a greater appreciation for what you do and why you do it. Forgive me, but I also thought national writers were rich. Thanks for the lesson and keep up the great service you provide.

Ken (Old Texican)| 11.20.09 @ 9:49AM

Mr. Tucker
I want to add my thanks and appreciation for what you and your wife do...and have done. I'll add a genuine thank you to all of your colleagues here at AM Spec. as well
On my own blog, I have a mouse-over link directly here ( http://judgeroy.wordpress.com )

Right here...right here...we Americans get the thought food and the spiritual food to continue battling for our republic.
Highest regards to you all
Ken

Jim| 11.20.09 @ 2:01PM

Beautifully written article. Thank you. Damn, I'm gonna have to go donate.

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