I’ve been waiting for someone to do a piece looking into 17th Street Productions, the ghostwriting agency that’s part of Alloy Entertainment, the marketing company behind Kaavya Viswanathan’s How Opal Mehta…..

Good for the Harvard Independent for doing it. (Where’s the Times on this seedy aspect of book publishing?*)

The Independent interviews Lizzie Skurnick, a former 17th Street editor and ghostwriter.

The impulse at a place like the 17th Street is to have a house voice,” Skurnick tells the Indy. “There are just reams and reams of stuff that’s written… It’s unavoidable that certain phrases will be recycled or said in a certain way… Often what you’ll find is that, it’s not that anyone is copying, it’s just that [these phrases] are the first things a mediocre writer would reach for.”

I wonder if the teen readers for whom these books are generated care whether or not the people who are claimed to have written them actually wrote them.

I know that when I was a kid, I would have been pretty broken up to learn that John D. Fitzgerald or Roald Dahl or Tolkien or E.B. White didn’t really write the books that carried their names….
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P.S. A reader who has gotten to the paper earlier than I points out that the Times weighs in—oops—with a piece on exactly this subject on today’s front page. (Did I say oops?)

Here it is…..