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OokamiKasumi — Writing for PROFIT
Published: 2011-01-14 09:20:15 +0000 UTC; Views: 26470; Favourites: 298; Downloads: 169
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Description REALITY CHECK!

Writing for Profit
It's Not just an Adventure - It's a JOB.

Whoever told you that writing fiction for publication - for money - is supposed to be Artistic, Fun, or Easy -- LIED.

Writing may look artistic, and creative writing certainly is artistic (that's why they call it Creative Writing,) but writing for a living; writing for publication with the intent to get paid on a regular basis is NOT artistic, it's NOT always fun, and it certainly is NOT easy.

Writing for publication is WORK. Sure, some of it is fun, but the bulk of it is mind-bending, eye-straining work. Don't get me wrong, creativity is part of the job of writing for a living, but if you think us professional writers turn on "the Creative Muse" at 8 AM and shut her back off again at 5:30 PM then you are missing the point entirely.

The Road to publication is paved with glamorous Half-Truths.

• Half-Truth: "If you write it someone will publish it."
• Whole Truth: "If you write it and the publisher is already looking for it, they'll publish it."

If you have written a spectacular SCI-FI story and the Publisher is looking for a Mystery story, they will pass over your wonderful SCI-FI for a Mystery with only half the quality of your SCI-FI, because Mystery is what they have an opening for - not SCI-FI.

When they hang onto your stuff for months - or even years - at a time? Think of it this way: They're probably waiting for an opening that they have the perfect story for.

• Half-Truth: "Once you're in with a good publisher you're in for life!"
• Whole Truth: "Once you're in with a good publisher you have to prove that you can Write on Demand."

While your name is still sitting on the `net (or the shelf,) you have until the next publishing cycle to punch out another story equally as good. (One month for your average magazine and one year for a novel.)

Only this time, the publisher is going to tell you what they want: "Gimme the same story, different characters, same plot arc but move some stuff around. Oh, and this time, don't have them do this, the readers don't like it, have them do that instead." (Sigh.)

Look at it this way: You don't have to guess what the publisher wants this time around.

• Half-Truth: "Once I'm in with a good publisher I can write whatever I want."
• Whole Truth: "If you want to stay with that good publisher you better write what they want, when they want it, in the way they want it written."

You're going to tell the publisher that you will only write what YOU want to write? Do you really think any publishing house is going to hire a writer that won't do what they want them to do? Unless you are Susie Bright or Anne Rice: "Game-Over, man. Game-Over."

Time to go back to your desk, find a new pen name, punch out yet another novel and go through the whole damn thing all over again to find another publisher. Only this time your new publishing house will call your old publishing house and ask what the problem was. Why aren't you with Them anymore?

Let me repeat myself: Do you really think a publishing house is going to hire a writer that won't write what they want them to write?

You want to make money? Then you knuckle under and work your butt off to deliver what the publisher is asking for.

Writing for Publication is NOT about creativity. It's about MONEY.

Writing for a living is about sitting at a desk in an office every day and WRITING whether or not you `feel like it'. Does this make you less artistic? Does this mean that you are not being creative? Does this make you a hack writer?

Forget all that stuff - it makes you EMPLOYED.

What else would you call it? Authors telecommute their work and progress to their editors and get paid for it. The faster they write the faster they're paid. The better they conform to the publishing house's demands, the better they are paid. End story.

A publisher is in the business of selling Books or Magazines not displaying Art or promoting Literature. They are looking for what THEY want, WHEN they want it in the WAY they want it. Period. If you can sneak interesting, different and Creative writing in between their formulaic demands GREAT! They Love that, but in the mean time the rest of your work had better conform to what they want.

What if the Muse strikes and you get a terrific idea? Great! Write it between assignments and make the publisher PAY through the nose to get it.

• Half-Truth: "I can make a fortune writing Erotica."
• Whole Truth: "You can make a fortune writing Erotica - if you sell it to a top publishing house, and it ends up on the New York Times Bestseller list in one of the top 5 positions."

Erotic Romance is currently the most profitable genre in both the eBook market and in New York. (Which is why I write it.) Authors for ePublishing Houses like Loose Id, Mojo Castle, Changling Press, and Samhain are making rather tidy - and regular - royalties on their erotica novels, but not a fortune.

If xXx is the way you really wanna go, writing a sex-story or Porn Letter for an adult magazine or eZine is much faster and far easier to crank out at volume. It's also steadier work than erotica and it pays better per word count. ($25.00 to $150.00 per letter, roughly 2 cents a word, at 15,000 words max.) Not to mention that you don't have to worry about characterization or plot, just spelling and grammar.

What? Did you think adult magazine Letters were written by Amateurs? Hell no! Those are professional writers. Trust me, a magazine editor will accept and pay more for a letter written by a professional writer than anything written by an amateur. In addition: the more expensive the magazine, the more they'll (probably) pay their writers.

Note: The writing standards for Erotic Romance markets are FAR higher than those asking for porn stories. Translation: To publish Erotic Romance, you have to use basic grammar, characterization and an actual PLOT.

-----Original Message-----
"What a wonderful rant! And here I was thinking that perhaps my being a mercenary writer was an anomaly! Fortunately, I have been doing everything you state here since I started, and people have become very annoyed with me because I keep succeeding when they fail… But even writing isn't everything. Your post didn't go far enough...

• Half-Truth: "Once your masterpiece is in print, people will buy it, love it, and demand more."
• Whole Truth: "People will buy it if they KNOW about it, will love it if the reviewers tell them it's wonderful, and will demand more if they know more are possible."

You also have to SELL.

Sell yourself, sell your book and sell your ability to do it all over again. The publisher doesn't want to work. They want to put the book on the shelf and have people slavering over it. But that doesn't just *happen* all by itself. Someone has to hype it, and it won't be the publisher.

The author must tell the readers. The author must solicit the reviewers, must produce press releases and attend book signings and make sure the readers know there will be new books.

But thanks for bolstering me up a bit. It's a lonely life in front of the computer, pushing and pushing to get noticed. Apparently, it's worth the trouble!"

~ Cathy Clamp ~ Published Author
(Posted with permission.)

Does all this seem like Too Much Work?

The average 60k category-length book takes 6 to 8 MONTHS to write.

• And then you have to Edit the manuscript, which takes about a month just for typos - that's if you already know your grammar and have the basics of story structure.
• And then you have to Shop it to the publishers, this alone can take YEARS, (Christine Feehan had a over half a dozen full novels WRITTEN before she was noticed by her publisher.)
• And then you have to negotiate with the publishers, which can take months just in haggling over contract clauses.
• And then you have to Edit the story AGAIN to what the Publisher thinks they can sell. This can mean ripping out whole hunks of plot and rewriting your characters to make them more suitable for THEIR reading audience. Add a few more months.
• And then it may be a Year or More before it ever shows up on the shelf.

Don't even THINK about royalties unless you sell spectacularly well. And even if you do sell well, royalties won't even show up until a full YEAR AFTER PUBLICATION.

Writing Is NOT a Get-Rich-Quick career - by any means.

Writing is TIME CONSUMING hard freaking work. Make no mistake - Writing for Profit is a 24/7 JOB - not something you pump out on the weekends when you're bored.

If you are prepared for the realities of Publication, you CAN Profit, in the long run. But - Not everyone wants to devote their entire waking life to research and typing.

The big question is: What Do YOU Really WANT?

What is more crucial to your Personal Writing Happiness?

Your Artistic Expression?
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Then you are a "Recreational writer"; someone who writes for the sheer pleasure of doing something creative. You are an Artist. Your future consists of publishing one 'great work', with the possibility of publishing another 'great work' a few years (or more) later on down the road - and never with the same publishing house.

Making Money?
~~~~~~~~~~~~
You are a "Mercenary writer" who has their own home office -- with a door -- that will pump out what ever is asked for in a timely, professional manner. You are one of the few, the proud, and the paid regularly. You don't need a day job because writing IS your day job, only it's 24/7 without holidays -- or insurance.

Anne Rice wrote Adult fiction under the name: AN Roquelaure. Horror author Steven King wrote for magazines, and Romance author Nora Roberts, also known as JD Robb, made her money writing Harlequin romances. Dean Koontz used to write smut and gothic romance to pay his bills. These authors worked their butts off writing whatever their publishers asked for all by themselves with no support, until they made a name big enough to dictate their demands to their publishers.

Fame?
~~~~~~~~~~~~
That makes you an "Aspiring Author". Your future consists of one great work that is most likely your own personal memoirs. Sadly, the only memoirs and biographies being published today are those belonging to big name Celebrities. But that won't stop you! You have a Vision! A dream! And a full time job that allows you time in the evenings and weekends to type away on your computer -- when your spouse isn't using it, or your children.

How do I know all this?

I actually write fiction for a living. However, I was once the copywriter / publicist for one of the largest internet porn companies in the world. This is where I learned all about writing on demand. Somebody had to write all that filler text, and make it interesting.

I am currently living on my ebook royalties. That's right, paying my bills by writing Romantic SMUT full time. I write what I'm told to write, when I'm told to write it, about things that I'm told to write about because I'm being paid to do just that.

I'm a Mercenary.

Advice to the Burgeoning Writer

Write every spare moment you have and FINISH your story. Always have at least two people check your grammar and your sentence structure. Have at least two more people read your stuff and check it for:

• Readability: Can you tell exactly what's happening to who? And How?
• Story-Drag: Is it Boring? Did your reader skim over any of your paragraphs to "Get to the Good Stuff"?
• Effectiveness: Does it make your reader FEEL something? Happiness, sadness, angst, excitement, arousal?

BEFORE SUBMITTING ANYWHERE!!!

Read the Submission Guidelines carefully.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Send the editors exactly what they are looking for. Close is not good enough. If they are looking for Erotic Romance, then your story had better be sexually explicit and involve a couple falling in love. You have to have both the sex and the Romance to interest an Erotic Romance publisher.

Be willing to work with the editors on requested changes.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Many editors try to be gentle with their comments to new authors and have been known to understate what they mean. That does not make their comment random or invalid! If an editor goes to the trouble of noting something about your story, take it very seriously.

Remember: You are writing to Sell and Publication Editors are looking for authors to fill their readers requests. They are there to make their publishing house look good by making YOU look good.

This has been your Reality Check announcement.

Ookami Kasumi
Mercenary Writer – and darn proud of it.
Related content
Comments: 274

mariealexandrinne [2015-05-13 09:48:13 +0000 UTC]

As you seem to know your topic, may I ask out of curiosity, if you know if (that makes a lot of ifs) there is a difference in treatment between big publishing houses and smaller ones? Do they treat their writers the same way?

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OokamiKasumi In reply to mariealexandrinne [2016-02-23 22:11:55 +0000 UTC]

Each publishing house treats their authors differently; large, small, indi, and ebook. Your best bet is to explore the websites of each publishing house you're interested in and Research as best you can. I've actually emailed a couple authors to ask for their opinions on the houses they work for.

Also, check out: Preditors & Editors

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Static-Foil [2014-05-02 00:46:50 +0000 UTC]

...But..how do I finish a s tory?? I can write it, crank it...but...then the end is like "gps not found" ;u;

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Static-Foil [2014-12-31 03:39:17 +0000 UTC]

The best way to Finish a story is by going back to the very beginning and looking for the one major problem (emotional or physical) that has NOT been solved. Once that problem is solved, you're done.

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therebeunicorns [2014-04-25 17:13:39 +0000 UTC]

So I'm sorry that I may not have been as seriously invested as I needed to be the last time I asked questions, but now that I'm facing the reality of maybe *truly* becoming a published author, I do have a much more serious question. It expands a bit on something I already mentioned.

(BTW I came to the realization on my own that past tense is better. So much for me trying to be edgy, har de har. It is possible to do my same style in past tense, all I have to do is change the tense! And then it's the same, but better! Lol!)

What is the possibility that someone like me would ever get published? Even as an Artist publishing one great work versus a for-profit writer...? Are there any ways to work around my obstacles?

Let me explain...I'm not worried about my writing. I think my writing will do fine, maybe not excellently, but fine. I'm worried about *me*.

What do I want out of writing? Well, I'm mostly in it for the art, but other than that...I don't want money or my own fame. I do want MY NOVEL to be popular, but I don't want ME to be popular, you know? It would be so awesome if a lot of people read my book and liked it. But I would rather not have a lot of people talking about me.

I think you've mentioned being public (I'm aware of the possibility of having to do book signings, promotion, etc) is important to the process.

Well, unfortunately I'm practically a severe agoraphobic. I have social anxiety disorder and I have a past (and present) that, if the media got ahold of it, would get me either ripped apart and fed to the dogs or else a whole lot of sympathy and requests to talk to me that I don't want.

So, I certainly hope that people don't actually care about the author that much to even do interviews with me or look at my past and such. That way, I could just write as a persona and nobody would care enough to talk about me. Talk about my book? Do want. Talk about me? Do not want.

Of course, the biggest problem is not all of that, but actually working with a publisher in the first place. My book can't have fame if it's not even published. Emails? No problem. Phone calls? I'd be nervous as hell. But I guess I could force myself to handle it as calmly as possible. I'd also stutter horribly and get questions wrong out of sheer fear of being on the phone. In person? I'd really, really, really have to push myself and REALLY have to want it that badly. Sure, I could show up. But the publisher, interviewer, whatever, will notice very quickly just how bad of a problem I have with talking to strangers.

And being in front of a lot of people, especially having to talk? Forget it. Just forget it. I'd ditch a public interview or situation the same way that I hid in the bathroom and ditched public speaking class. It is that much of a phobia for me. Seeing my face on television or even just seeing people talking about me on the internet would make me sick.

Ehh...so is there any hope for my situation? I'd love to get my book in front of as many people as possible, as long as I don't have to put MYSELF literally in front of people.

I could be satisfied with being an Artistic Expression - type writer with a small following. I have just always hoped that more people could be exposed to my work. It's like an oxymoron: I want publicity, but I don't want it.

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SilverNekoBaka [2014-01-11 22:24:45 +0000 UTC]

I'd like to write novels for money some day. I found this very useful. I was unaware just how restrictive this business could be. Out of curiosity, may I ask if publishers are at all willing to talk things over with an author and allow them to explain their motives behind doing what they're doing or discuss future plans for the plotline, should a series be involved? Or do they simply say "This is what we want. No complaints. Do it." If this is how the business truly is, I'm willing to work along with it, but I'd appreciate someone willing to discuss things with me and clarify why they want what they want. I'm willing to take orders, but not blindly. I'm a person who needs to know the motives behind the directions I'm being given.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to SilverNekoBaka [2014-12-31 03:43:21 +0000 UTC]

Once you sign the contract, they own it. Period.
 -- Some editors will indeed discuss the adjustment of things with you, but that opportunity only happens AFTER the contract is signed.  Before the contract is signed, it's strictly PASS or REJECT and usually without any kind of explanation.

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Kokoro-Hane [2013-07-06 07:14:36 +0000 UTC]

And if you want to write what you want, there's always self-publishing...but getting yourself out there if ANOTHER problem and may or may not work out for you. Writing for money sure is a lot of work!

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Kokoro-Hane [2013-07-06 08:13:18 +0000 UTC]

The major drawback to self publishing is Lack of Legal Protection. Publishing houses can afford expensive lawyers to defend their author's work. Self-published authors rarely have that kind of cash.

This is in addition to the fact that almost all self-publishing establishments --such as Amazon and Poetry.com-- claim ALL rights in the small print, where the author doesn't see it, to change or republish the work WITHOUT notifying the original author.

Yes, writing is very hard work and the pay SUX.

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magn-etism [2013-06-27 14:10:38 +0000 UTC]

Even though some of it seems a little harsh, I'm glad there is someone out there who can deliver these hard facts. Among the writing clubs I've been in, no one has ever sat us down and truly talked about the stress, the hard work and even the downright failure we might experience. In reading this I have a new outlook on what it would take and the "difficulty level" (for lack of better terminology) of being a writer.

Your other journals are very helpful as well and I appreciate you taking the time to lay down the facts.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

OokamiKasumi In reply to magn-etism [2013-07-06 06:49:29 +0000 UTC]

ForeWarened is ForeArmed.
-- If you know what to expect, you can Plan for it.

I'm glad you like my essays.

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sugomon [2013-05-20 14:48:30 +0000 UTC]

Wow. I mean… wow. I want to be published — I still do... but... oh snap. I was already planning to have a job as an english teacher so that I wouldn't have to write just for profit, but… dang. Are there any ways to be able to write and get published without having someone tell you what to do? I'm a really rebellious person — I wouldn't tolerate being controlled like that or being told when or why or how to publish my art, something that I should be proud of. Is there a chance that I could get what I want without publisher-hopping?

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OokamiKasumi In reply to sugomon [2013-05-30 07:14:56 +0000 UTC]

Are there any ways to be able to write and get published without having someone tell you what to do?

Yes. Self-publish. Go with a Vanity Press.
-- However, 1) you will NOT have any sort of Legal protection if your work is plagiarized by a Professional author because big publishing houses have far more clever lawyers, and the vanity press will NOT defend you. Also, 2) you gain no respect from authors who were Not self-published.

Self publishing is pretty much the same as posting on Fan-Fiction .net, only it's way more Expensive.

Go with a real Publisher -- even if it's just an ePublisher. You'll be protected legally, and the editor's job is to make your work look GOOD. I have over 30 titles to my name and I won't publish anything that hasn't gone through my editor's hands because I KNOW they're better at grammar than I will ever be.

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sugomon In reply to OokamiKasumi [2014-01-11 04:04:54 +0000 UTC]

Sorry for the late reply - but thanks so much for the advice!

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OokamiKasumi In reply to sugomon [2014-01-12 08:34:39 +0000 UTC]

I'm glad I could help!

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Fragthewinterbrew [2013-04-04 14:45:26 +0000 UTC]

That was incredibly brutal and realistic, but thanks nonetheless for the reality check. I'm more intone with my goal, I know where I need to go now. o_o with slightly altered self esteem lol.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

OokamiKasumi In reply to Fragthewinterbrew [2013-05-30 07:08:58 +0000 UTC]

Look at it this way, you can't realistically plan for the future if you don't know what to realistically Expect.

Now, you do.

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WynterPhoenyx [2013-03-17 05:44:04 +0000 UTC]

I LOVE this reality check, it really made me think about if I really wanted to get published or just write for fun.

I have to ask... What do you think of the 50 Shades trilogy?

I can see that it sells well because of the "erotica" factor, if you can really call it that, but the author seems to have done so little research on BDSM that she doesn't even seem understand the emotional complexities behind it and she really gives the whole thing a bad name, or rather, a worse name. I couldn't stomach reading the book, but from what I can tell, after reading fairly indepth reviews, it's just another emotionally abusive relationship like Twilight that likes to play at BDSM without knowing what it's really about.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to WynterPhoenyx [2013-05-30 07:05:34 +0000 UTC]

What do you think of the 50 Shades trilogy?
-- It's a poorly written 'Twilight' fan-fiction by someone that knows absolutely NOTHING about real BDSM, or real Love.

I couldn't stomach reading that book either. My editors at all 4 publishing houses HATE it.

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WynterPhoenyx In reply to OokamiKasumi [2013-05-30 20:44:55 +0000 UTC]

I'm glad so see your publishers have better taste than the people who published it and the masses who read it. I honestly can't figure out how those "books" even got published, and how the masses could even think that they're worthy of even reading...

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OokamiKasumi In reply to WynterPhoenyx [2013-05-31 03:20:32 +0000 UTC]

Honestly? I can't either.

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beaglebuddy100 [2013-02-06 22:01:00 +0000 UTC]

I just wanted to thank you for posting this. I'm trying to learn as much as I can about publishing. One day I'd like to be an author, but I know I would definably need a real job to support myself. What I'm trying to do is write stories (well at this point, only one) that is somewhat like what's out today (supernatural blah blah) but hopefully make it well written and give it a bit of depth. I'm willing to put in the work to hopefully be an author someday, but as for now, I need to learn to write. I think that being able to write means that you can pump out good clean cut writing with quality in the short amount of time, when and what the publisher wants. I'm amazed that you're REAL published author, because that's really incredible.

I've also been looking into self-publishing because lots of people seem to be doing that these days. Do you know anything about that? Any advice you could give me?

Thank you again so much for posting this!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

OokamiKasumi In reply to beaglebuddy100 [2013-02-18 10:43:37 +0000 UTC]

AVOID SELF-PUBLISHING. Seriously. All money should flow to the Author, and with a vanity press, that doesn't happen. It 'costs' you to publish, to the point that you may as well use Kinkos, the corner copy-printing store.

I'm glad you liked my essay!

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beaglebuddy100 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2013-02-18 19:32:04 +0000 UTC]

wow thanks so much for responding!

I think I'd rather put in any and all the hard work I can into my novel to get it actually published than spend money on self publishing. It would be much more rewarding

I can't thank you enough for answering my question! I'll have to buy one of your books

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sumgie1 [2012-12-30 16:51:19 +0000 UTC]

Thank you, this was kind of topical for me because I have long wanted to become a professional writer. Or to be more precise, I want to write because writing is my passion but I realize that I need to have money to have security so, ideally, my books would be sold and I would live from it. But, if life would be just like you described it, it seems ugly. It seems that, if I want to pursue writing as a career, I would either not have stable income or would have to write what the publisher wants (not what I want) and both ways are in conflict with my dream. So the best way seems to be a sort of a compromise - have some livelihood and write what I want in my free time, maybe try publishing it and hope for a miracle.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to sumgie1 [2013-02-18 10:45:24 +0000 UTC]

That's how most people do it. They have a full-time job and publish on the side. On the flip-side, I'm one of those freaks that can write anything the publisher wants.

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sumgie1 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2013-02-18 11:54:33 +0000 UTC]

I suppose that may require one heck of a talent.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to sumgie1 [2013-02-18 11:59:51 +0000 UTC]

Not talent: Practice. Believe me, it's all skill.

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sumgie1 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2013-02-18 12:03:39 +0000 UTC]

I imagine.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to sumgie1 [2013-02-18 12:06:11 +0000 UTC]

Talent is when you get it right by Accident.
Skill is when you get it right On Purpose.

I've been writing for a long, long time.

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sumgie1 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2013-02-18 12:16:19 +0000 UTC]

Yes, I figured.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to sumgie1 [2013-02-18 12:23:25 +0000 UTC]

LOL! Don't take me so seriously. I wouldn't be here on DA if I didn't want to let my hair down -- and I have a 'lot' of hair.

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sumgie1 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2013-02-18 15:36:59 +0000 UTC]

Oh, I so don't know you. You looked so serious.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to sumgie1 [2013-02-18 22:46:05 +0000 UTC]

I'm dead serious about writing, but not a damned thing else.

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Oichi3Black [2012-11-21 01:03:11 +0000 UTC]

I hate those lies, they always warped the truth when t comes to publishing. It's very important people know this or else publishers will think you don't know what your thinking

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Oichi3Black [2012-11-24 09:50:50 +0000 UTC]

It's Deliberate. The last thing certain publishers and agents want are authors that actually know how much they're worth.

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Android3000 [2012-10-01 00:09:08 +0000 UTC]

I want to write because I wish to tell a story

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Android3000 [2012-10-03 18:06:34 +0000 UTC]

Ah, so you're a Recreational writer; you do it for your own personal pleasure.

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Android3000 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2012-10-03 18:48:12 +0000 UTC]

I guess I am; I would love the story to sell well, but at the same time I want to keep control over the tale.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Android3000 [2012-10-05 17:45:26 +0000 UTC]

I understand. I'm a control freak too.

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Android3000 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2012-10-05 18:33:06 +0000 UTC]

Yeah, you want control cause your feel someone will change it to much, and then it wouldn't really be your story...

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Android3000 [2012-10-07 19:34:03 +0000 UTC]

Actually, I want control because someone else would do it Wrong.

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Android3000 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2012-10-08 03:04:19 +0000 UTC]

that too

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DjinnInABottle [2012-08-04 08:12:52 +0000 UTC]

Great post. I already knew several of these, but there were a few parts that I didn't know about. Glad to hear some of this from someone who has personal experience with it.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to DjinnInABottle [2012-08-20 02:03:50 +0000 UTC]

ForeWarned is ForeArmed.

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THELEGOMack [2012-08-03 15:52:02 +0000 UTC]

I'm getting the feeling I shouldn't publish my finished story for another several years.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to THELEGOMack [2012-08-20 02:03:24 +0000 UTC]

At least you're getting this advice ahead of time. I had to learn it all the Hard way -- after the fact.

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AirGirl13 [2012-07-10 16:12:27 +0000 UTC]

I'm a minor and have school to worry about, but as soon as I'm home, I am at my desk, writing. I try to write something I would read, and then force friends and family to read it. Because i'm young, I can't get an agent, so I'm trying a branch of Penguin, DAW, who accepts unagented manscripts. I'm not sure if I have what it takes, but I'm trying my hardest and putting all of my soul into it!

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OokamiKasumi In reply to AirGirl13 [2012-07-29 16:42:48 +0000 UTC]

Good luck.
-- You're not going to get an agent until you have a contract from a publisher. Once you have a Contract --not a Promise, an actual Contract-- then you can call any agent you like and say: "I have a contract from Daw, would you represent me?" They will ALWAYS say yes.

All an agent is, is a Lawyer that makes sure you don't get screwed by your contracts. That's ALL. (I have one, okay?)

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AirGirl13 In reply to OokamiKasumi [2012-07-30 01:20:26 +0000 UTC]

Alright! Thanks. I'll need that luck...
I'll be sumbitting this September, and hoping for the best. Maybe if they like me, I'll get my agent. God, I hope this works out.

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