A Note from Yiyun Li

November 16, 2009

Dear Fellow Reader,

One of the questions I have been asked most often by aspiring writers is how I began publishing. Like many young writers, I sent stories out to literary magazines and received rejection slips back, all recorded diligently and dishearteningly in a spreadsheet. The journey of one particular story—“Immortality,” which was the first story I wrote—especially frustrated me: for two years, it traveled around in the mail and gathered some of the kindest rejection letters I have ever received. In the spring of 2003, I got a phone call from Brigid Hughes, then at The Paris Review, asking if “Immortality”—sent to the slush pile with a one-sentence cover letter—was still available. The story was soon in print, and that, along with a few other pieces published in 2003, started my career—I was signed up by an agent, and at the end of the year sold my first two books. When the story was awarded the inaugural Plimpton Prize, for a while it became the center of a controversy, as it seemed improbable that a story from the slush pile, unaccompanied by a recommendation from an established author or a series of pressing phone calls from an agent, could see itself in print.

But it is not impossible—that is my answer—if your story finds the right reader and editor.

In 2005, when Brigid planned to launch a new literary magazine, A Public Space, I agreed to be a contributing editor—for a selfish reason, to read along with her, to agree and disagree with her. For the past four years, we have had numerous conversations about stories, storytelling, and other topics that have little to do with the business of publishing but rather with the pure joy of reading great stories: three years after Timothy O’Sullivan’s story (his first publication) appeared in Issue 1 of A Public Space, we still go back and reread the story, and talk about it. Stories and essays, by established writers as well as newcomers—Marilynne Robinson, Kelly Link, Amy Leach, Ian Chillag, and many others published in the magazine—live on in our discussions.

These conversations have become an important part of my life: writing, as people always say, can be a lonely business, though reading, as a woman told me on my book tour, can be a lonely business too. I am fortunate that I have discovered a friend who makes writing and reading less lonely for me, and it is my hope that other readers like me will find the magazine, to read with us, to be included in the conversation.

Of course it is a business to run an independent literary magazine—a most challenging business when calamities and doom seem to be the perennial topics about the publishing industry, and universities cut budgets and close established literary magazines. It is especially crucial, at this moment, for A Public Space to receive support from readers and lovers of great literature, as it is not the businesspeople in the business, in the end, who make a difference in nurturing young writers and curating great literature, but people who love reading and care about the future of literature.

I sincerely hope you will support A Public Space, by subscribing to the magazine, making a donation, or simply spreading the word to other readers. Thank you.

Yours truly,
Yiyun Li