I graduated with a degree in English and lived close enough to NYC to be able to live with my mother for a few years (publishing doesn't pay well -- a little better now than it did ten years ago, but still not well). Other than that, it was pure luck -- I was out of work when the assistant job at the SFBC came open, and my interview with Ellen Asher (then and now the Queen of Science Fiction) went well. I've clung like a barnacle ever since.
A question about how much fun the job was...
Comment about it being her dream to edit SFF.
And, she asked, is reading books and writing/thinking/talking about them all the time as much fun as she thinks it will be?
It is. But there's also an element (for me, at least) of having to read books that you don't like -- and doing that regularly.
And I explained that last point a few days later:
Well, yes, but there's also the large segment of "books I don't like personally but which are popular with other people." Private readers can generally ignore these; reviewers and editors need to deal with them somehow.
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