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OokamiKasumi — Writing for PROFIT
Published: 2011-01-14 09:20:15 +0000 UTC; Views: 26492; 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

OokamiKasumi In reply to ??? [2011-12-10 00:42:52 +0000 UTC]

I look at it this way: Forewarned is Forearmed. If you know what to expect, you can prepare for it.

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Ryuu814 In reply to ??? [2011-10-30 02:31:51 +0000 UTC]

Huh...I knew that writing was practically a job but the whole thing just seems very...disheartening.
Writing is really the only thing I want to do in the future and chances are I'll somehow push through and get stuff published...

Just seems very...no idea what the word is XD.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Ryuu814 [2011-12-07 00:32:30 +0000 UTC]

It seems very Cold.
-- And it is. Writing professionally is Not artistic, though the results can look that way. It's Business. If you can be satisfied with that then you'll do just fine. I write the stuff I can't get published as fan-Fiction. That's where I indulge in my creativity.

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kittikinz0x In reply to ??? [2011-10-06 05:56:39 +0000 UTC]

This was very enlightening. Thank you for posting it. I've recently started working on a story, although I'm still mired in the planning process and probably won't start actually writing for quite a while. That being said, the dream of publishing something has been in the back of my mind for years, and having read this I have a much better idea of how realistic that dream might be for me. All things considered, I probably wouldn't write for a living, simply because I don't think I could write on demand - it's taken me years to come up with an idea good enough to get me working on a real story (usually I toy around with a concept for a day or two, then decide it's useless and toss it out the window). I would like to get something published though (eventually), so I suppose I still have something to work towards. (:

I do have a somewhat related question: how exactly does one go about finding and contacting publishers and/or editors? It's just something I've been wondering for a while, and I'd appreciate any input you might be able to give me.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to kittikinz0x [2011-10-09 19:09:01 +0000 UTC]

...how exactly does one go about finding and contacting publishers and/or editors?

Google.com
-- Just about every publisher there is has a website and an email address.

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mruki In reply to ??? [2011-09-10 23:25:41 +0000 UTC]

Oh darn- recreational writer then...guess I'll keep my day job XD.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to mruki [2011-09-12 21:38:36 +0000 UTC]

I had a day job for a long, long time.

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LadyofGaerdon [2011-09-09 12:21:05 +0000 UTC]

Very helpful. Thanks for writing this. I was a bit confused by this part, though: "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." - Who hangs onto your manuscript for that long? And is that before or after a contract?

This part was also confusing: "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."

That only applies to self-publishers, right? Which is why authors who are with traditional publishers sell so much better? Because they have paid full-time marketers?

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OokamiKasumi In reply to LadyofGaerdon [2011-09-10 19:10:42 +0000 UTC]

Who hangs onto your manuscript for that long? And is that before or after a contract?
-- Editors before they'll offer a contract.

That only applies to self-publishers, right?
-- WRONG. Every publisher from ebook to New York expects you to do your own marketing. Seriously. Only the top 5 New York Times bestsellers get marketing help from their publishers.

I happen to have a pair of novels with a traditional publisher, Kensington. They Do Not market my books, I do. They also make me far less money per book than any book with my epublishers. Just to set the record straight, an epublisher is Not a Vanity Press -- a self-publisher.

How to tell a Vanity Press (self-publishing) from any other publisher.
-- If you have to pay even one penny for Anything At All in order to be published, it's a vanity press. All money flows to the author -- always.

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LadyofGaerdon In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-09-11 09:30:53 +0000 UTC]

Oh wow - that's unfortunate. But that's only if they don't say upfront that it takes them 3 or 6 or 9 months to get back to you, right?

Hmm. That is troubling. I know that you get way more money per book with epublishing. I just would never be satisfied without having a paper-and-ink version of my book in physical bookstores. Plus, overall, authors who go traditional make more money than those who don't. I'm really troubled by this non-marketing thing. I mean, if you manage to snag a contract with a large traditional publisher, that name essentially is you marketing, isn't it? You don't have to lobby Barnes & Noble to carry the latest book from Big Important NYC Publisher. And obviously you have to be the one going to the book signings, but they're the ones who set them up, aren't they? People who go with lulu and such probably couldn't even get a spot to do a book signing.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to LadyofGaerdon [2011-09-12 21:54:52 +0000 UTC]

But that's only if they don't say upfront that it takes them 3 or 6 or 9 months to get back to you, right?

Wrong again. When you mail your manuscript to a publisher, they Never tell you how long they will hold onto it -- especially traditional publishers. This is why you only send out Partials -- the first 60 pages. If you send the whole manuscript, you cannot send it to any other publisher. That's considered "simultaneous submissions." If you do send a whole manuscript, you're expected to wait 6 months to a year before sending that manuscript to someone else. This is why rejection slips happen so fast.

I just would never be satisfied without having a paper-and-ink version of my book in physical bookstores.

What makes you think ebook publisher Don't print their books in trade paperback or have them show up in bookstores? They do print and they do open distribution to any bookstore willing to take them. Only my short stories are strictly electronic. All of my novels are all in trade paperback -- all of them, and quite a few of them can be found on bookstore shelves.

There are epublishers that distribute strictly electronic. I just don't use them.

...if you manage to snag a contract with a large traditional publisher, that name essentially is you marketing, isn't it? You don't have to lobby Barnes & Noble to carry the latest book from Big Important NYC Publisher.

Correct.

...obviously you have to be the one going to the book signings, but they're the ones who set them up, aren't they?

Not At All. If you want to do book signings, you have to visit the store in question and ask them yourself if they'd like to host one for you. Only the top 5 New York Times Bestselling authors get that kind of thing from their publishers -- and only those local to the publishing house, namely New York City.

People who go with lulu and such probably couldn't even get a spot to do a book signing.

Correct. You tell a bookstore that you're published by Lulu, or any other vanity press, and they'll laugh at you. If you're not on the Ingram's distribution list, you don't get into a bookstore. If you're not already in the bookstore, why would they let you hold a book-signing event?

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JezahnaART In reply to ??? [2011-08-29 10:37:06 +0000 UTC]

oh man, sometimes I wish reality checks weren't so real...

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OokamiKasumi In reply to JezahnaART [2011-09-02 03:56:13 +0000 UTC]

Everyone prefers the fantasy, which is why so many new writers are caught flat-footed when reality rears its ugly head. Look at it this way; forewarned is forearmed.

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Shokaytsufleur In reply to ??? [2011-08-22 13:16:41 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for being real. Really. This is awesome.
For some reason now, I keep hearing "Markie, sell us your soul" being repeated over and over again...
I really need to take that particular musical quote down from my wall now. Thank you for the wonderful reality check.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Shokaytsufleur [2011-08-23 13:52:48 +0000 UTC]

I look at it this way, if you know the truth, you can't be disappointed.
-- Fore-warned is fore-armed.

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Obi-quiet [2011-07-31 18:40:24 +0000 UTC]

Hmm, you bring up some excellent points. A lot of which, I have thought about, but many which I have not. Thank you.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Obi-quiet [2011-08-01 04:40:55 +0000 UTC]

I look at it this way,
-- If you know the TRUTH, it's much harder to to be tricked. Forewarned is forearmed.

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Obi-quiet In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-08-01 15:48:26 +0000 UTC]

Point. Most of my problem right now is I wouldn't even begin to know where to look to write for things. I won't write for porn or graphic smut (personal moral thing more than an "I just don't want to thing), but I'm happy to write for magazines and such. Any suggestions?

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Obi-quiet [2011-08-02 00:23:12 +0000 UTC]

Yes: Google.com is your friend.
-- Internet eZines and print magazines are always looking for writers -- and some of them even pay!

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CyTheTiger In reply to ??? [2011-05-18 02:12:06 +0000 UTC]

What if your considering being an author as a sort-of, second job. Any advice?

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OokamiKasumi In reply to CyTheTiger [2011-05-18 03:07:33 +0000 UTC]

My advice, if you want to be an author, then finish a story and check the various publishers' Submission Guidelines for what would suit your story best. Then write another one, and another one. Keep writing and keep submitting. That how I do it.

have a second full time job is a Smart move on your part. It puts less pressure on you as an author.

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CyTheTiger In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-05-18 23:51:23 +0000 UTC]

Thanks a bunch for the help. It means a lot!

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Wytewulf In reply to ??? [2011-05-06 15:59:31 +0000 UTC]

Out of curiosity, just how demanding are publishers, in your experience? Like, when they tell you what they want you to write, is it specific, or vague?

Do they tell you 'write a story with this character, in this place, doing this', or are they more 'write something that somehow pulls this into the plotline'?

I just want to know so I can be somewhat prepared when I hopefully become a author.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

OokamiKasumi In reply to Wytewulf [2011-05-06 22:33:26 +0000 UTC]

It depends on the publisher and what the author writes.

I share a publisher with an author friend of mine. While I have never been asked to adjust any of my stories in that fashion, She Has. She was asked to "make her characters more sympathetic" and give her story "a more hopeful ending." This happened several times with the same publisher. However, she has a tendency to write nihilistic tragedies where I don't.

This is why I tell people to read a given publisher's Submission Guidelines before they submit. If the story being submitted isn't quite what they're looking for but they take it anyway, you can guarantee that changes WILL be asked for.

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Wytewulf In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-05-07 02:48:25 +0000 UTC]

Hmm. Nice to know.

Thanks.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Wytewulf [2011-05-07 19:24:31 +0000 UTC]

Glad I could help.

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Ashski In reply to ??? [2011-05-02 20:04:23 +0000 UTC]

My parents say I write good stories but I never finish them plus I think they're lying. I'm working on one now just for fun but I won't post up here on DA. The thing is if I wanted to publish it and then be forced to write it over and over in different ways it would be really hard. I have a problem just thinking of regular ideas and I always get writer's block >.< I love writing but to me it seems it would be too hard as a job.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Ashski [2011-05-04 12:03:13 +0000 UTC]

I love writing but to me it seems it would be too hard as a job.

Writing IS very hard as a job, but that doesn't mean you can't get the occasional story published for your own pleasure. Magazines and anthologies are always looking for decent short stories. You won't make much money, but if you're not trying to pay the bills with your writing, it can make a nice bit of extra income and you won't be stuck writing the same thing over and over.

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Ashski In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-05-04 19:51:56 +0000 UTC]

cool^.^ What got you into doing little tutorials and such for writing? I know some people wouldn't want to because it's like more on they're plate. But you seem to really enjoy putting these up here on DA.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Ashski [2011-05-05 14:38:34 +0000 UTC]

What you're seeing are the accumulation of tutorials I've written since 2006. This is Not the first site I've posted them on either. That's why there are so many of them.

Writing tutorials helps me memorize the techniques. It engraves the process into my brain so I don't forget it. It's personal Homework.

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Ashski In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-05-05 19:58:35 +0000 UTC]

Nice. Does it work for you? Cause I think I might try doing that.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Ashski [2011-05-06 22:43:39 +0000 UTC]

Writing notes on how I do a technique does indeed help me memorize the technique. Writing those notes into a tutorial hammers it in even deeper.

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Ashski In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-05-06 22:47:15 +0000 UTC]

Cool

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Flandres-Agent In reply to ??? [2011-03-30 19:40:36 +0000 UTC]

I've read some things about publishing and editors before. I know of the whole 'If it's too good to be true, then it's probably isn't.', or something along those lines.

However, after reading this, I realised how hard writing is. I knew writing would be a hard endeavour, but I didn't know it would be that hard. And there are a couple of things that now concern me.

In this, you said that the Publisher (Whoever the Publisher in question is.) wants you write what THEY want/write what they demand. Now this kind of sparked second thoughts. Seeing as I write Fantasy, a publisher who publishes the genre will demand Fantasy genre books from me? The fact that I have three to write, all linked together of course (I don't know if you'd remember me from that past note.) makes me think; 'Will they be happy with them?'

Seeing as they would demand Fantasy, they'll get another two Fantasy books. Take JK Rowling for example, her HP series were Fantasy, or at least I assume so. She had planned all seven from the start, and when published, they were a famous best seller, and the Publisher demanded (Again, assuming.) more of the same genre, so she delivered the second, then the third, then the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh.

It may seem that I'm making no point but what I'm trying to get across is; would the Publisher's (Who publishes Fantasy.) demands be satisfied as long as I have the rest of my series to go through?

Now on to the next thing. I apologise if this seems like a wall of text, but I just want to be cleared of some uncertainty's. I've read in a previous comment that once you sign the contract, the Publisher's OWN the book, and can change any part of it, with or without your consent. Now I understand this, it's very important for something to get published, however, one thing niggles at the back of my mind.

Seeing as I like creating characters, and worlds and all that lovely stuff fantasy involves. My characters seem like my babies, sad maybe, I know, but still. After I signed it, do I still hold copyright of my characters, locations, etc but the Publisher owns just the book? I may be fretting over this a little much, mistaking that the publisher only owns the BOOK, not the characters etc.

Finally, if I was to make a choice out of all three reasons as to why write, I would choose all three. I want to express my artistic creation, I want to make money, I want to become a well known author, and finally, I want to write because I like to.

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Flandres-Agent [2011-04-01 07:23:08 +0000 UTC]

...a publisher who publishes [fantasy] will demand Fantasy genre books from me?

A Publisher that only publishes Fantasy will only ACCEPT Fantasy. The only time you have to give them something on demand is when you've signed a Contract for a certain number of books, but haven't delivered on all of them.

'Will they be happy with them?'

Only the editor can answer that question.

...would the Publisher's (Who publishes Fantasy.) demands be satisfied as long as I have the rest of my series to go through?

Again, only the editor can answer that question.

...After I signed it, do I still hold copyright of my characters, locations, etc but the Publisher owns just the book?

Signing the contract means you're selling them the Copy rights to everything contained in the books which includes the characters, unique locations, and so forth. If you decide you don't like that publisher any more, or don't want to offer them any more books within that series for whatever reasons, you'll need to wait for the copyright to Run Out before you can go to another publisher with those characters & locations, etc. This can mean waiting anywhere from 2 years to 10, and some publishers (Dorchester & Ellora's Cave) take the rights for your lifetime + 70 years.

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Flandres-Agent In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-04-01 17:49:54 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for the answers. Well, seeing as I want an art/writing career, say if I DID sign a contract, would that stop me from drawing the characters?

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Flandres-Agent [2011-04-02 16:16:31 +0000 UTC]

...if I DID sign a contract, would that stop me from drawing the characters?

Absolutely not.
-- Some publishers even encourage the authors to post them on their websites.

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Flandres-Agent In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-04-02 16:26:04 +0000 UTC]

That's good to know! Thanks again!

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zumoarino In reply to ??? [2011-03-07 03:05:44 +0000 UTC]

I write for all three of those XD what does that mean?

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OokamiKasumi In reply to zumoarino [2011-03-07 07:09:29 +0000 UTC]

It means that you'll be happy writing for any reason at all.

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zumoarino In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-03-07 13:26:43 +0000 UTC]

yay lol

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Starrphyre In reply to ??? [2011-02-23 02:52:31 +0000 UTC]

I have a few questions

do you think that it is impossible to get a book published that doesn't fit the popular mold?

If you show your manuscript to a publisher, and they want to change it but you don't can they steal your idea?


Are eBooks really preferable/marketable over printed? (I've always had this kind of silly dream of one day holding one of my books in my hands)

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Starrphyre [2011-02-23 04:07:28 +0000 UTC]

do you think that it is impossible to get a book published that doesn't fit the popular mold?

It isn't impossible at all. It's quite possible. However, that type doesn't make enough to pay the bills.

If you show your manuscript to a publisher, and they want to change it, but you don't, can they steal your idea?

Once you sign the contract they OWN it and can change anything they like with or without your permission. If you haven't signed the contract, you can refuse anything you like. However, this lowers your chances of that story being published with THAT publisher.

You cannot steal an Idea because Ideas cannot be owned to begin with. If Ideas could be owned, there would only be One vampire novel in existence and it wouldn't be Dracula.

Are eBooks really preferable/marketable over printed?

YES, but only in the genre of Erotic Romance. If you plan to write in any other genre, the normal publishing houses are the only way to go -- at the moment.

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Starrphyre In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-02-23 12:45:24 +0000 UTC]

thanks for the reality check, even though its kind of depressing

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OokamiKasumi In reply to Starrphyre [2011-02-23 14:01:35 +0000 UTC]

Look at it this way, if someone is trying to scam you with an offer 'too good to be true', you'll spot it right away.

You can't be fooled if you know the rules.

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Starrphyre In reply to OokamiKasumi [2011-02-23 22:02:12 +0000 UTC]

oh good point, thanks!

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MangoRamune In reply to ??? [2011-02-21 17:44:34 +0000 UTC]

As an artistic type writer, I have the utmost respect for mercenary type writers,
I fall asleep when I try to write smut, or anything that doesn't swagger into my brain and demand my attention.
Led to some pretty awkward awakenings when I was still figuring out what I liked to write about...

This is the third tip I've read thus far, and I'm liking them all.
Thanks for the help~

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OokamiKasumi In reply to MangoRamune [2011-02-21 18:10:27 +0000 UTC]

I think all writers start out as artistic types. It's the main reason why people first pick up the pen.

I became a mercenary because I needed to do Something to make a living. I'm simply not suited to work with people, retail or even an office. I just don't fit with them. My personality is too odd. Writing stories suits my needs Perfectly.

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HarleyDavidsonGal In reply to ??? [2011-02-08 23:07:26 +0000 UTC]

this is very interesting

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OokamiKasumi In reply to HarleyDavidsonGal [2011-02-09 03:35:29 +0000 UTC]

I'm glad you liked it.

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