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Yee F-ing Ha!

Started by clehrich, April 06, 2004, 10:33:27 PM

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clehrich

Hey, since we're all getting sloshed and not paying attention to the normal rules about what is and is not an appropriate topic of conversation here on the Forge, I thought I'd post a little piece of news that crossed my desk literally in the last half hour.

After a long, agonizing process of getting a review, a press, a reviewer, another reviewer, and everything else (it's taken since Jan. 2003), I finally got remarks back from a distinguished reviewer about my current book project.  This is an academic book, incidentally, so the review process determines basically whether the book will be published by a given press.

The result:
Cornell University Press does indeed want the book, though we're not quite ready to hash out contract details.

Basically the reviewer, though certainly tough and incisive, was extremely positive about the (partial) book manuscript.  My editor now can feel confident that we're going to move forward.  Probably by mid-summer, then, I should have a contract from a VERY distinguished press for a new book.  Which should, if all goes very well, be in print by about Nov. 2006.  (Yes, it does take a long time, and I only have 1/3 of it written anyway.)

Those of you who have touched on the academic world have some sense of what this means (in short, if I could ever get a tenure-track job, I can have tenure more or less for the asking, since the first book is out as of this past September).  Those of you in the academic world, I expect you to respond with the appropriate and traditional combination of politely effusive congratulations and just-below-the-surface seething envy.  :>

Yee fuckin' ha!

(convenient that this came in before the Birthday forum ended, no?)
Chris Lehrich

Sean

Chris -

Congratulations - that's great! I am acutely aware of how much this kind of thing can mean for one's career. Keep up the good work! I admit that I didn't realize that academic presses gave book contracts in advance like that. Perhaps this varies from field to field?

coxcomb

Congrats!

I'm not an acedemic, but I am a professional writer. A book deal is a big self-esteem/career boost in my line of work as well.

Out of curiosity, what's the subject of your book?
*****
Jay Loomis
Coxcomb Games
Check out my http://bigd12.blogspot.com">blog.

Valamir

Hey, great news.  Can you talk about the book?

Rob MacDougall

Congratulations, Chris! That's excellent. And Cornell U Press is a great get!

I take my manuscript on the book trail next academic year. Just have to finish writing it first.

Rob

Effusive politeness? Check.
Seething envy? Check.

clehrich

First off:

Sean, academic presses do indeed do preliminary contracts.  However, they don't do them for unpublished authors, pretty much ever.  An exception is if a book is on a subject that will clearly sell very well (such as a book on Al Qaeda which the person was researching in the late 90's and had nearly completed on 9/11), but that's very rare.  Once you have a book out, however, you can make a stab at it.  Still, it's not all that common until you have two or three books.  The point is that the press needs to be sure that the book will actually happen in reasonable time, and be good.

As to the book....

Well, it's called Magic in Theory and Practice, a title I'm stealing mostly from Aleister Crowley (who spelled it "Magick") and partly also from Catherine Bell's Ritual Theory, Ritual Practice.

Basically it's a set of six tightly linked essays on magic, occultism, various kinds of critical theory, methodology, and so on.  In some ways, what I'm trying to do is simultaneously to kick some ass about the craptacular ways scholars have been dealing with magic and occultism, and also in a sense to lay down a new ground for interdisciplinary work on the subject.

Topics covered on the occult side include:
Hermes Trismegistus, ley-lines, Giordano Bruno, fangshi [ancient Chinese magicians], John Dee, Athanasius Kircher, Tarot cards, Aleister Crowley, and probably some other stuff.

Topics on the theory/method side include:
Mircea Eliade, morphology and comparison, Jonathan Z. Smith, Frances Yates, semiotic logic, ritual (esp. Bell), Levi-Strauss, collection, W. Benjamin, postcolonial studies, Derrida, Manfred Frank, and some other bits here and there.

All stirred together in an unholy union.  Should be fun; the trick is to keep it from being impenetrable.  :)

For those who care, my first book is a very in-depth analysis of Cornelius Agrippa's Occult Philosophy, something that there hasn't been up to now at all.  If that means something to you, you know whether you want to shell out $87 for it.

Wheee!  <sorry, just skipping>
Chris Lehrich

Walt Freitag

Congratulations!

And I gather that Yee F'ing Ha is a Chinese theorist whose ideas you'll be evaluating in the book?

- Walt
Wandering in the diasporosphere

Sean

Very cool stuff, Chris.

Also, thanks for the heads-up on publishing practices. I'm the sort of person who finishes MSs before shopping them anyway, but it's good to know that I can get some 'cred' from past publications if I need it.

coxcomb

That sounds like a cool book!

I'm also glad of the clarification of your other book. When I saw a reference to Agrippa in a previous post, I assumed you meant the late renaissance fencing master. :-)
*****
Jay Loomis
Coxcomb Games
Check out my http://bigd12.blogspot.com">blog.

taalyn

Congratulations!  -bastard-

Actually, it's good to see that anyone in Religious Studies (that is your field, isn't it? I'm guessing from the Grimes, Jonathan Z, et al. references) / Academia is dealing with the occult in a serious manner. The few books I've seen and read on the phenomenon have been mostly cr@p.

There's a point where just discussing what people do is not enough / pointless, and it needs to be addressed in theoretical terms, as to what it accomplishes / means and why.

I'll have to look up your book on Agrippa, though it will be a while before I can fork out $87 for a book.

A.
Aidan Grey

Crux Live the Abnatural

jrs

Congratulations, Chris, it actually sounds like something I'd pick up and read.  Your brief description also brings back memories of Ioan Culianu.

Julie

Valamir

Hey, magic...that can be related to roleplaying, easy.

So when it becomes available be sure to give a shout out down in Publishing or something.

No doubt I'll want a copy.

ScottM

It sounds like a lot of carefully researched work-- should be interesting.  I hope that it's interesting to write as well. Congratulations!
Hey, I'm Scott Martin. I sometimes scribble over on my blog, llamafodder. Some good threads are here: RPG styles.

clehrich

Many thanks, all.

taalyn: Total agreement.  You betcha.

julie: Unfortunately, I never got to take a class with Couliano, as he was murdered before I really got into the subject. but more or less every faculty member I ever talked to while I was at Chicago asked if I'd known him.  So, yes, in some respects parallel tracks.  But don't count on my work looking much like his: we changed cars somewhere down the railway.
Chris Lehrich

Rich Forest

Congratulations, Chris. That's very cool.

Rich