Cover Story: Susan Isaacs: The Insider Interview
The bestselling author talks candidly about changes in the industry, and how she thinks publishers and authors can better work together.
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Lynn Rosen
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Seventeen<%2Fspan>%20magazine%20and%20a%20freelance%20political%20speechwriter,%20she%20was%20home%20with%20young%20children%20and%20living%20in%20Long%20Island.%20"I%20wrote%20a%20mystery.%20It%20was%20the%20usual%20[situation%20of]%20reading%20too%20many%20mysteries%20and%20then%20saying,%20'I%20think%20I%20can%20do%20this.'"%20A%20school%20acquaintance%20of%20her%20husband's%20was%20managing%20editor%20of%20Simon%20%26%20Schuster%20and%20offered%20to%20read%20the%20book.%20He%20liked%20it,%20and%20told%20Isaacs,%20"You%20don't%20expect%20friends%20to%20write%20a%20good%20book!"<%2Fspan>%0D%0A%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookbusinessmag.com%2Farticle%2Fsusan-isaacs-the-insider-interview-25058710%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="1382" type="icon_link">
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But I think what men don't expect from women—and what other women don't expect from women—in terms of fiction is humor. It's only been the last 10 to 15 years that it's become acceptable for women to be funny without being kind of homey—being funny about the little daily things of life. Wit is acceptable.
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Lynn Rosen
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