Well, I’ve researched and researched, and written and written, and now I must revise and revise. When I actually have a manuscript turned in to my editor — before Thanksgiving, for sure! — I will exhale and write a bit here about the process, and how things have turned out. I should also be blogging a bit more henceforth. Thanks for bearing with me through this hiatus.
In the meantime, I should mention that Salon is celebrating its 10th anniversary this week. It’s hard for me to believe that ten years ago I was a disaffected ex-theater critic, technology columnist and fledgling HTML adept making the jump from print to online. I knew it was risky, and the fact that our money-making plans were strictly theoretical made me think, okay, this will be fun for a year or two, then Salon’s likely to go down the tubes and I’ll make a living freelancing.
After a fun year became two, then three, then four, I moved over from my job as technology editor to managing editor, taking on a lot of responsibility for things like budgets and site management. And I began to think, hey, this thing might actually last! Whoops — cue the bursting of the dot-com bubble. The moment I started getting confident, suddenly it really did look for a while like Salon might go down.
But by then I was hooked. I was determined to see it through, as was everyone else who stuck it out, and I put my back into a lot of difficult and creatively unfulfilling work to do my part to help Salon survive. It was only last year that I felt comfortable enough about the company’s stability that I could think about taking a book leave this year without feeling like I was abandoning ship. Things are definitely on the upswing, but, you know, I’m a little wary of feeling too confident. Old wounds and all.
By now you may have seen Gary Kamiya’s history of the site — it’s hilarious, deftly captures much of the heart and soul of Salon through the years, and brought back a torrent of memories for me. My angle on some of the history might have been different: Gary’s less focused than I’d have been on Salon’s place in the evolution of the nascent field of Web publishing; he’s more immersed in consideration of Salon’s place in the general milieu of political and literary journalism. I always worked one step closer than him to the business side of things, and many steps closer to the technical side of things. My version of those aspects of the story may be a little less Stranger in a Strange Land and a little more In the Belly of the Beast.
When I’m a little less written out I may trot out some of those tales. Or maybe I’ll just wait till Salon’s 20th.
For now, as I near my own milestone of a finished book, I toast all my current and former Salon colleagues, and look forward to rejoining them in January. More on that, soon, too.
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