I'm sure you all saw the story on the main page. Simon and Schuster downsized Margaret Clark out of a job. Thanks for all the hard work, Ms. Clark. Good luck in your future endeavors.
Who's left?
I'm sure you all saw the story on the main page. Simon and Schuster downsized Margaret Clark out of a job. Thanks for all the hard work, Ms. Clark. Good luck in your future endeavors.
Who's left?
Jeniffer Heddle and Ed Schlesinger.
I hate to say this but I'm not sad one bit. I think she was leading Trek Lit in the wrong direction. Unfortunately it's probably too late to undo what she has done.
Agreed...we've already seen the ripple effect, in delays and cancellations, of Marco's layoff, so one tends to think that this layoff will exacerbate the matter.It's too early to know how this is all going to play out, but I don't see any way in which getting rid of two senior editors of Star Trek fiction in less than a year can be anything but bad news, regardless what you may think of their editorial decisions.
Seconded, of course.If Margaret's gone, I can only wish her the best.
Agreed...we've already seen the ripple effect, in delays and cancellations, of Marco's layoff, so one tends to think that this layoff will exacerbate the matter.
Given what the movie has done for the franchise, this is terrible timing, even if that timing is coincidental.
I'm sure you all saw the story on the main page. Simon and Schuster downsized Margaret Clark out of a job. Thanks for all the hard work, Ms. Clark. Good luck in your future endeavors.
Who's left?
Jeniffer Heddle and Ed Schlesinger.
Wow. Best of luck, Margaret.
Ed was the editor on A Time to... and inherited several other of John Ordover's projects, and he has continued to edit New Frontier since John O. left.I've never heard of them. Have they done much Trek editing?
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