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The Last Contract: William T. Vollmann's Battle to Publish an Epic (2025)

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Why This Matters

William T. Vollmann's ongoing battle to publish his epic novel highlights the challenges authors face in balancing creative vision with industry constraints, especially amid personal tragedies. This story underscores the importance of supporting literary innovation and perseverance in the face of adversity, inspiring both writers and readers alike.

Key Takeaways

William T. Vollmann in Rome, Italy , 2023, Photograph, Maria Moratti via Getty Images

A few years ago, the novelist William T. Vollmann was diagnosed with colon cancer. The prognosis wasn’t great but he went ahead with the treatment. A length of intestine drawn out and snipped. It was awful but it worked. The cancer went into remission.

Then his daughter died.

Then he got dropped by his publisher.

Then he got hit by a car.

Then he got a pulmonary embolism.

But things are looking up.

William T. Vollmann spent “twelve or fifteen years” researching and writing a novel about the CIA called A Table for Fortune; as of this writing it has a few back-channel blurbs from editors and assistants who’ve caught glimpses and say it might be his masterpiece, or at the very least a new sort of achievement for him. But when he finished it, in 2022, he turned it over to his publisher, the final installment of a multi-book contract (although even that part gets complicated), and that’s when, to use Vollmann’s words, “Viking fired me.”

His publisher of thirty years.

It’s more complicated than that.

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