He
could be very blunt. In a letter to Farley Mowat on a proposed foreword:
And secondly, I think it is badly
overwritten. Some of the phrases and some of the pictures that are conveyed are
extremely good, but it’s too contrived and a bit too purple for my liking, and
I think you should tone it down so that it will read more smoothly ….. It’s far
better than I would expect to see from another author. It’s terrific, fabulous
and fantastic, but it isn’t your best work and needs further effort. In short,
it’s none too good.
In
a letter to poet to Earle Birney, over a critical interview Birney gave in
England, he was furious and forgiving in the same letter:
You son of a bitch, I would be far more
inclined to agree to give books away on your behalf if you wouldn’t involve
yourself in such vicious and incredibly stupid interviews as the one that
appeared in Smith’s Trade Journal. I
would like to think you are misquoted, but I am sure that you weren’t, and I
think you must have taken leave of your senses. What the hell have you got
against Canadian publishers? ….. As usual, I forgive you.
When
poet Irving Layton complained about Jack not being willing to publish books
commissioned by the publisher on Layton's work but which Jack considered not publishable the reply to Layton
was graphic:
Are you really all that bloody insecure?
I could vomit. Let’s get a few things straight and on the record ……Another
thing I should tell you, old friend, is that the most important thing that your
poetry accomplished in this country is to make poetry respectably
unrespectable. Of if you prefer, unrespectably respectable. Poetry in Canada
used to be in the hands of old ladies and the odd gifted human being like Bliss
Carman ….
To
save time in responding to some author complaints in the 1970’s:
Jack had a “Bullshit” stamp made and
sometimes used it on missives received from Pierre [Berton].
He
could be playful. He wanted Christina Newman, wife of author Peter Newman, to
write a biography but she was concerned with the demands on her time of a hyperactive
3 year old child and her hyperactive demanding 38 year old husband. Jack wrote
back:
We would be prepared to make a
sufficient advance to look after babysitters, housekeepers, and even, for God’s
sake, a mistress for Peter if that would help.
He
could be humorous while making a point. In a letter to the Toronto Star newspaper:
When the paperback manager of Canada’s
largest ‘books only’ chain [Classic Books] makes disparaging comments about
three of Canada’s most distinguished authors – Margaret Atwood, Pierre Berton
and Farley Mowat – while drooling over [the American prostitute-turned-author]
Xaviera Hollander it is time to call a halt …. I propose that we use the term ‘koob’,
book spelt backwards, to describe the sort of impressions from a police blotter
that Ms. Hollander writes … Please don’t misunderstand me. I like junk reading.
I’ve sold a lot of koobs in my day and plan to continue to do so, but I do
respect books and I think a distinction must be made.
Many
authors contacted to him as they were upset over negative reviews of their books. To
Pierre Berton he wrote:
Don’t read the reviews! Measure them!
He
could write moving letters of appreciation. He wrote to Gabrielle Roy:
Have I ever told you that you write the
most beautiful letters I ever receive? I am often tempted to bother you with a
string of letters just so that I can have the replies. Why should I be
surprised, though? As I have told you so many times, you are the greatest
writer in the country, and it is not surprising that you should write such
lovely letters.
And
lest authors think submission letters are not important King provides an anecdote
involving American publisher, Alfred Knopf:
He once told Jack that a secret to a
book’s success could often be found in the letter that accompanied a
manuscript: “If they can’t write a good letter, how can they write a good book?”
I
doubt you can find a publisher today who writes letters with the verve, passion and
style of Jack.