In Chile everybody writes. I realized this one night when I was waiting to do a live television interview. A girl who had been Miss Chile, or something like that, was on before me. Maybe she'd only been Miss Santiago or Miss Burst Into Flames. Anyway, she was a tall, pretty girl, who talked with the same empty poise of all Misses. She was introduced to me. When she found out that I had been a juror for the Paula contest she said she had almost sent in a story but in the end she hadn't been able to, and that she would submit something next year. Her confidence was impressive. I hope she'll have time to type up her story for the 1999 contest. I wish her the best of luck. Sometimes the fact that everyone in the world writes can be wonderful, because you find fellow-writers everywhere, and sometimes it can be a drag because illiterate jerks strut around sporting all the defects and none of the virtues of a real writer. As Nicanor Parra said: it might be a good idea to do a little more reading.
...and at least Miss Chile wrote her own story.
Precisely. It's only natural that the story of Miss Chile is, all things equal, easier to sell than that of Miss Mid-Atlantic Dental Hygienist. It's not about making life 100% fair, but about making sure that "has actually written a novel" is the minimum requirement for someone to be called a "novelist."
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