|  04-04-2012, 06:20 AM | #31 | |
| Feral Underclass            Posts: 3,622 Karma: 26821535 Join Date: Jan 2010 Location: Yorkshire, tha noz Device: 2nd hand paperback | Quote: 
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|  04-04-2012, 06:44 AM | #32 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,270 Karma: 10468300 Join Date: Dec 2011 Device: a variety (mostly kindles and kobos) | 
			
			This article from 2006 estimates between 50-100 authors of SF&F earn enough from writing to support themselves. I agree with those who say it's always been tough to support yourself purely off writing. Certainly off writing fiction and selling books. Writing, like acting and making music, is one of those things that there are more people wanting to do than there's an audience for. So from a crude economic point of view over-supply drives down prices, fragments the market and makes it very hard to make a lot of money. With ebooks and self-publishing this is exacerbated. There are those who simply jumped on the band-wagon and when they realised that they will only ever make a few sales here and there will leave. But equally there are those who are just happy to be being read and for whom the extra money is a bonus. | 
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|  04-04-2012, 06:52 AM | #33 | 
| Stercus accidit            Posts: 330 Karma: 513878 Join Date: Mar 2012 Device: Nookpadle 6 | 
			
			To quote Samuel Johnston "No man but a blockhead ever wrote, except for money."
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|  04-04-2012, 06:59 AM | #34 | |
| Literacy = Understanding            Posts: 4,833 Karma: 59674358 Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: The World of Books Device: Nook, Nook Tablet | Quote: 
 My experience with indie authors is that 1 out of 10 can weave a good story but only 1 out of 15-20 can both weave a good story and write well. Yet, because nearly all of the indie titles I have "bought" I "bought" for free, I am willing to wade through a dozen or so pages of a book before deciding whether to continue to read or to delete. When I do find an indie author who can both weave a good story and write well, I am as well-rewarded as if I had bought the newest novel by a well-known, established trade author. It makes the search worthwhile. I have found that I am unwilling to spend $15 on an established author for an ebook for several reasons. First, is the fact that the ebook is licensed. Second, is the problem of DRM. Third, and perhaps most important, there are too many James Patterson-type bookmills. Is the book I am paying $15 for really written by Patterson or has he just lent his name to the narrative for a bigger cut of the pie? I think it is a mistake not to keep searching for high-aulity indie authors. It was through such searching that I found indie authors like Shayne Parkingson, LJ Seller, Michael Hicks, Richard Tuttle, Vicki Tyley, and Tracey Falbe, among others. And once I found them, I found the reading experience to equal that of the well-known trade authors but at a significantly more reasonable price. Consequently, I have been willing to pay for their new books (e.g., in Tuttle's case I bought 28 of his books). | |
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|  04-04-2012, 08:52 AM | #35 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,516 Karma: 2567610 Join Date: Oct 2009 Device: Kindles - Keyboard, Fire, 2-US, iPhone, iPAD | Quote: 
 By all means those who prefer to purchase by skimming the lists of books published by all methods, sampling, and choosing for themselves should have that right. But those who prefer to read blogs, rankings, and recommendations from 3rd party sources and buy based on those are also entitled. Many of those types also post on these forums. It seems to be a little like saying "I like to book my own vacation so I don't think there should be any Travel Agents." | |
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|  04-04-2012, 09:31 AM | #36 | |
| Guru            Posts: 826 Karma: 18573626 Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Touch, Nexus 7 (2013) | Quote: 
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|  04-04-2012, 09:52 AM | #37 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,516 Karma: 2567610 Join Date: Oct 2009 Device: Kindles - Keyboard, Fire, 2-US, iPhone, iPAD | Quote: 
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|  04-04-2012, 10:03 AM | #38 | 
| Cynical Old Curmudgeon            Posts: 1,085 Karma: 8495696 Join Date: Jul 2011 Location: Halifax, Canada Device: Kobo Mini, Kobo Arc, HTC Desire C | 
			
			Authors of *fiction* (and maybe biography - which is, frankly, close to fiction anyways, in most cases :P), because obviously there are and were many thousands supporting themselves by writing. Journalists, technical writers, and so on.
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|  04-04-2012, 10:10 AM | #39 | 
| Guru            Posts: 826 Karma: 18573626 Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Touch, Nexus 7 (2013) | |
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|  04-04-2012, 11:00 AM | #40 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 8,478 Karma: 5171130 Join Date: Jan 2006 Device: none | 
			
			I have my plan in the works to get paid for my writing. Attachment 84836 Quote: 
   Last edited by Steven Lyle Jordan; 04-04-2012 at 11:03 AM. | |
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|  04-04-2012, 12:24 PM | #41 | 
| intelligent posterior            Posts: 1,562 Karma: 21295618 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Ohiopolis Device: Kindle Paperwhite 2, Samsung S8, Lenovo Tab 3 Pro | 
			
			That's curation, not gatekeeping. Everything that comes into their hands has already passed the gatekeepers and is 'in the yard,' to stretch the metaphor. Of course, these days a lot of work never encounters a gatekeeper at all, hence some writers' despair over the glut of work on the market. All it takes to enter the market now is to cobble together an ebook and hit "upload," whereas not so long ago self-publishing and even small-press publishing were a joke, and inherently limited your audience to the number of DTBs you could afford to print. Now, setting up a PayPal checkout and hosting your own work is trivial, and bribing booksellers and going on morning shows are arguably less effective than amassing followers on Twitter.
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|  04-04-2012, 12:31 PM | #42 | |
| Youngsta            Posts: 202 Karma: 1041786 Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: San Diego Device: kindle | Quote: 
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|  04-04-2012, 12:51 PM | #43 | 
| Addict            Posts: 219 Karma: 2617122 Join Date: Oct 2011 Location: North Carolina Device: NOOK ST, Nexus 7 | 
			
			I think fiction authors who make their living doing just*that are relatively rare. Vonnegut's estimate may not be far off. *By that I mean: they don't blog and/or drive revenue through advertising on their website; they don't sidelight as a screenwriter, editor, journalist, etc; they don't teach; they don't do writer's workshops, conferences, lectures; basically, anything other than the primary stream of being paid to write their fiction. Most working writers have to be fairly diversified in their writing unless/until they can find a strong following in a niche that will let them pick & choose their projects. I think very few authors are at the "pick & choose" level. | 
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|  04-04-2012, 12:51 PM | #44 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 2,698 Karma: 4748723 Join Date: Dec 2007 Device: Kindle Paperwhite | Quote: 
 They never have any realistic suggestion of how this is supposed to happen in absence of copyright, of course, just either a sort of "well, it'll work out somehow" attitude, or "writers can dig ditches can't they?" solution. As to your solutions, that's just going back to the old system where the wealthy controlled the flow of ideas and information to the masses. I prefer not to retreat to intellectual serfdom. Last edited by carld; 04-04-2012 at 12:57 PM. | |
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|  04-04-2012, 12:53 PM | #45 | |
| Feral Underclass            Posts: 3,622 Karma: 26821535 Join Date: Jan 2010 Location: Yorkshire, tha noz Device: 2nd hand paperback | Quote: | |
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