Does the phrase "stable author" mean an author who is not unstable, or a member of the agent's stable?
(I'm pretty sure it just means a trusted author/one that's been signed. I'm just wondering about the origin of the phrase)
I don't know the actual origin of the phrase, but it does not refer to the fact that the author is stable, mentally or in terms of output. It prefers to the fact that they are part of the "stable" of reliable earners on the client list. To be perfectly honest, I think "stable" is supposed to invoke the idea of ... a place where you keep horses.
....Yeah, I'm kind of grossed out, too.
Authors = Horses... You feed 'em a bit of hay and they run when you tell them to.
ReplyDeleteI wish they did. "Remember what I said about getting the revision done in time for Penguin's deadline? Well, no hay until you do."
ReplyDeleteMaybe you should post them a glue stick to remind them what happens if they DON'T run on demand ;-)
ReplyDeleteKind of like a horse's head, only a lot less messy.
I have a quite lovely image of a well-appointed stable with writers sitting in each stall, typing away on laptops, the sweet smells of orchard hay and saddle soap wafting through the air... :)
ReplyDeleteHowever, I'm a writer who owns horses, and my horse gets treated like a King, so ... the phrase "stable of authors" actually has good connotations for me.
A tip... you really want the horses to run? Bring out the GRAIN. That gets them excited. :)
billie
Does this mean we get free carrots once we sign on? (tosses head and whinnies)
ReplyDeleteDoes this mean if I get to be part of a stable someone will come muck out my house once in a while?
ReplyDeleteOnly when it's knee-deep ...
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I thought it was only audiobook readers who got a little horse.
ReplyDelete