Years ago I was asked to be a judge for a novel contest. I was one judge of among, I believe, seven. I never met them and, for that matter, never knew who they were. The contest was for the best book in a particular category, for a long-lived organization the name of which has no relevance to this story. In any case, I was asked to judge among some 250 novels from a given year. The judgment was made in this fashion: each judge read a book, and then scored it on a 1–10 scale, 10 being highest. The book with the highest total score was declared the winner. Though there was no communication among judges, the complete tally would be known to all.
When the final tally was shared, the independent judges had by and large voted for the same ten books in the top ten rankings. That’s to say all the judges pretty much evaluated the 250 books in the same way. Moreover, when I read the books I soon realized that a good novel announced itself very quickly, and a poor work did much the same. I was astonished. Did my own work announce itself—from the point of view of quality—so quickly? Assuming that was so—and here’s the question I am posing—why, I asked myself, could I not evaluate my own work so well and so fast? I’d love to have your answer. Then I’ll tell you what I think.