Romance novelist accused of lifting work - Yahoo! News
January 10th, 2008 @ 2:32 am

Romance novelist accused of lifting work - Yahoo! News

In the online version of Romanceland, this story began early Monday on the romance reader blog known as Smart Bitches Who Love Trashy Books when one of the bloggers gave a Cassie Edwards novel to a friend who wanted to get her feet wet in the genre. The friend noticed some peculiar passages that were lyrically dissimilar to the author’s voice in the majority of the book. So dissimilar that the reader Googled the dissonant passages and faster than you could say “Britney Spears needs help”, Savage-Gate began.

Bloggers added their comments. Author loops were a-titter. Silent authors were likened to giving tacit approval/support to the plagiarist. Another large romance reader site, Dear Author (which has a couple of law-savvy folks running it) posted an involved definition of what constitutes plagiarism (which can be different from copyright infringement)

In an email to Dear Author, Penguin denied that Ms. Edwards did anything wrong or plagiarized other works, saying that it was reasonable under “Fair Use” conventions.

Interestingly enough, AP contacted John Barrie, a plagiarism expert. He looked at the passages and agreed that the material was lifted. It looked like it to my uneducated eyes, and if the expert says so, well I gotta go with the dude who makes his living fighting plagiarism.

My opinion? Word-for-word copying of someone else’s work, whether it’s in copyright or not, fiction or reference, and passing it off as your own word is WRONG. Either rewrite the reference material so that it’s your own style, or give credit to the original author. Better yet, cover your assets and don’t use it at all.

Writing · Publishing · Blog

1 Comment

  1. Dear Author: Romance Book Reviews, Author Interviews, and Commentary » Blog Archive » You Have No Right! Or Do You? I Don’t Know Anymore
    said,

    January 29, 2008 at 6:12 am

    […] After weeks of thinking, whining, ranting, and being generally disoriented in the aftermath of Savage Gate (phrase courtesy of Seressia Glass), it finally dawned on me that all of the brouhaha, both with the plagiarism thing and the mean girl thing, is all about boundaries (yes, I know I’m slow). Where does “inspiration” end and plagiarism begin? What is and isn’t appropriate for readers to discuss? What is and isn’t okay for readers to want to know? What once seemed like a series of no-brainers to me have suddenly become contested territory, with ongoing struggles and negotiations, not only on the limits of intertextuality (which is a wonderfully vexing or fascinating gray zone, depending on your perspective), but also of where blogging ends and “reporting” begins, and even on the limits of civility (this last, of course, not always addressed directly). […]

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