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APNewsBreak: Publisher Pulls Debut Novel

Qr Markham Book

HILLEL ITALIE   11/ 8/11 02:39 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — A debut spy novel, Q.R. Markham's "Assassin of Secrets," was pulled Tuesday after its publisher said it discovered that numerous passages had allegedly been taken from other sources.

Little, Brown and Company said the book, released last week as a paperback original, included material "lifted from a variety of classic and contemporary spy novels" and that stores should return any copies. Customers who purchased the book can return it for a refund from the seller, who will in turn be compensated by the publisher.

Little, Brown had signed Markham, 35, to a two-book deal and said the second novel has been canceled.

"We take great pride in the writers and books we publish and tremendous care in every aspect of our publishing process, so it is with deep regret that we have published a book that we can no longer stand behind," Little, Brown president Michael Pietsch said in a statement. "Our goal is to never have this happen, but when it does, it is important to us to communicate with and compensate readers and retailers as quickly as possible."

According to a Little, Brown spokeswoman, Nicole Dewey, "Assassin of Secrets" borrowed from Ian Fleming's James Bond novels and fiction by Robert Ludlum and Charles McCarry. Dewey declined to offer examples of passages in question and would not say how the publisher learned of the similarities.

Markham's novel was published by Little, Brown's Mulholland Books, which specializes in "suspense fiction." As of Tuesday afternoon, "Assassin on Secrets" ranked No. 43,966 on Amazon.com.

The novel tells of top CIA operative Jonathan Chase and his battle against "Zero Directorate," which captures and kills agents. Publishers Weekly had praised the book as "quirky" and "entertaining," and noted that the "obvious Ian Fleming influence just adds to the appeal."

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NEW YORK — A debut spy novel, Q.R. Markham's "Assassin of Secrets," was pulled Tuesday after its publisher said it discovered that numerous passages had allegedly been taken from other sources. ...
NEW YORK — A debut spy novel, Q.R. Markham's "Assassin of Secrets," was pulled Tuesday after its publisher said it discovered that numerous passages had allegedly been taken from other sources. ...
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10:28 AM on 11/09/2011
My first-to-post comment at Markham's own Huffington piece was rejected, so I am late to the conversation. As an indie author with critically acclaimed ORIGINAL thrillers (under my pan name, Lior Samson), I am incensed by the brazen exploitation evidenced in Assassin of Secrets. The publishing world has gone crazy in rewarding cut-and-paste artists with two-book contracts when indie authors can't even get into the slush pile. I still wonder what the erstwhile poet intended: performance art? a critical commentary on publishers or on writers of spy fiction? Tell us Quentin, what were you thinking?

--Larry Constantine (writing aas Lior Samson)
07:56 AM on 11/09/2011
how did "West Side Story" get past the "Romeo and Juliet" plagarism test?
senseandnonsense
Trapeze artist
07:15 AM on 11/10/2011
Did Bernstein lift text from Shakespeare without attribution?
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Tom Sutpen
A for-real Socialist
10:44 PM on 11/08/2011
"Immature writers imitate. Mature writers steal." -- William Faulkner
09:24 PM on 11/08/2011
His looks seem mildly plagarized from John Lennon....
09:52 PM on 11/08/2011
Haha - I thought that too!
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Shelly Santiago
Blogger/Author
09:13 PM on 11/08/2011
Why didn't they notice it before it was published? I don't understand how his book developed little legs and jumped off the desk …making a fast getaway from the editor. The first thing they should check is for originality. This is why they need to start thinking outside the box. Bring Science Fiction back or bank in Fantasy…. Enough of the Conspiracy genre books.
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AnaM
06:12 PM on 11/08/2011
How writing careers end before they really start.
It's rare for any writer to bounce back after plagiarism. I've never heard of anyone who has succeeded in gaining another book deal.
09:21 PM on 11/08/2011
Doris Kearns Goodwin is doing fine.
senseandnonsense
Trapeze artist
07:20 AM on 11/10/2011
She was well-established already.
03:01 PM on 11/09/2011
And Janet Dailey is writing Calder novels again (after settling the 1997 suit brought by Nora Roberts that asserted plagiarism over =seven= years, for those who don't remember the brouhaha.)
03:53 PM on 11/08/2011
What a dope. A thriller writer stealing from Fleming and Ludlum is as obvious a rock band stealing from the Beatles. Obvious to everyone, that is, except whoever signed this guy to a two-book deal. I suspect some editor at Little Brown had one hell of a tough day at the office over this -- one of those days that ends with your personal belongings in a cardboard box by the freight elevator.
09:56 PM on 11/08/2011
Editors are usually so busy editing the books they're publishing, they don't have time to read all the other blockbuster titles out there, let alone commit them to memory! Give 'em a break! The author signs a contract stating that the work is original - don't blame the editor!
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AnaM
03:49 AM on 11/09/2011
I'm guessing there is plagiarism software out there that can minimise this issue.
There are similar programs used at universities to check papers.
04:27 AM on 11/09/2011
Editors are so busy looking for the next acquisition that they hand raw text to copyeditors charged with cleaning up grammar and style issues, not w vetting for plagarism....
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lightist
light as a photon, heavy as tungsten.
02:59 PM on 11/08/2011
What a bunch of selfmoral righteous prigs. Everyone who knows better, steals. But it's not stealing if your voice is the inspiration-engine brain, blood, and guts.

I'd like to ask you who say, "How dare he?", what you think of the fact that 99% of America is stolen from by banks, corporation as "person" on up through our government?

And they "take out" some writer who is either staging this(doubtful), or wasn't slick enough to steal the way the big boys and girls do.

Picasso, upon hearing of Matisse's death says, "Oh, I guess I'll have to take over where he left off."

And please, make your response great so I can steal it.
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Hypocrites are Watching
If I agreed with you we’d both be wrong.
04:07 PM on 11/08/2011
Already a fan :P
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danny saunders
ma nishtana?
02:51 PM on 11/08/2011
Oh, oops!
10:28 PM on 11/08/2011
My thoughts precisely. I was going to say the same thing, but I didn't want to copy your words. I do wonder, though, how the plagiarism was spotted? Hmmm...
02:11 PM on 11/08/2011
In the past some of my books were pulled from bookstore shelves. They weren't selling well. That doesn't seem so bad now.

If I just could have gotten a couple of them banned I would have had it made.
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Catherine in Tulsa
I am woman, hear me vote: Obama 2012
02:03 PM on 11/08/2011
I love how he admits to have worked in bookstores 1/3 of his life! And he awoke one morning with this AMAZING story in his head!!!
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jokamachi
Dog on roof? Check. Scissors? Check.
02:03 PM on 11/08/2011
If you're going to write prose and poems, the words you use should be your own, don't plagiarize or take on loan...

There's always someone somewhere, with a big nose that knows, who'll trip you up and laugh when you fall...

SPM
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mattrett
02:02 PM on 11/08/2011
People who plagiarize, and not people who come uncomfortably close to mimicking or who accidentally use portions of notes, etc., but people who plagiarize are mentally deranged to think they will get away with it. I don't believe they really DO think they'll get away with it. But they should be punished and mocked.
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Tigerama
Sarcastiest, Irishest, Gay Veteranest Human Alive
02:00 PM on 11/08/2011
If only there had been some way to double check something like this.
02:16 PM on 11/08/2011
Something like Copyscape?
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Tigerama
Sarcastiest, Irishest, Gay Veteranest Human Alive
07:20 PM on 11/08/2011
Something like a google search.
01:07 PM on 11/08/2011
What is the fastest way to kill a writing career? Oops...I think you answered it.
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Catherine in Tulsa
I am woman, hear me vote: Obama 2012
02:04 PM on 11/08/2011
Can we call him a writer?