Recommended Reading :: Facebook Silence
Are we still talking about our addiction to Facebook despite its evils? Apparently, yes, we still are, with New England Review Editor Carolyn Kuebler contributing a new perspective to the conversation – especially for writers. In her editorial for Issue 38.2, she addresses some of the known issues with the social media platform, and comments that “Facebook seems to present a special kind of hell for writers” in that it “offers the possibility of an audience beyond one’s circle of friends (the real kind)—and even better, an audience that responds immediately, positively, and in great numbers.”
But, alas, what about when there is NO response? What about the silence of a Facebook post? “Writers have always known that theirs is a lonely art,” Kuebler comments, “but after spending time on Facebook it’s as if we have to learn this all over again. We have to remember that the audience for literature is largely silent; it takes its time.”
Read the full editorial here, and Kuebler’s closing comment of appreciation for writers, even if it is only ever offered in silence.