‘You’ve not had much luck with the book, I hear.’
That had to be the (0) …A… of the year. My novel had been rejected four times (1) ……… far.
I’ve no doubt that behind my (2) …… the family were having a good snigger. Rhona of course had been the loyal (3) ………. , though I admit that her piteous expressions when the thing limped home battered by franking stamps were harder to (4) ……………. than her sister’s outright sarcasm: ‘Has your boomerang got back yet, Patton?’ she’d enquire, while her husband Jack would give the knife an extra twist by asking if I’d managed to sell any of my daubs. Which meant that he presumed I’d (5) ……………….. my job on the railways to pursue a painting career. Maybe I should have. The manuscript had begun to show bruises from its days, weeks and months (6) …………….. in the ‘slush pile’ of various publishing firms. Actual criticism of the novel by its rejectors was very (7) ……………. on the ground, although the consensus of opinion seemed to indicate that its main weakness (8) …………………… in its apparent ‘lack of plot’.