DMcCunney wrote:Randomiser wrote:Dennis, I'm sure what you say is quite true, but I don't think very much of it is relevant to RFC.
Back in 2005 Baen were claiming he had had 9 NYT top ten books and over 5 million books in print. It has only gone way upwards in the past 10 years.
He has 2 major series, one middling one and 2 or 3 collaborative ones currently on the go. On average at least 2 new books seem to come out per year. He is translated into several languages and has an international following. While the royalties for the English versions of the early books will be restricted by the Baen CD giveaway, they are still on sale and even coming out in 25th Anniversary special editions, which Baen is presumably doing because they sell.
He seems a pretty savvy kind of guy and has been around the industry a very long time - I think we can assume his contracts give him a more than reasonable share of all that.
I know nothing substantive about his financial situation, but it sure doesn't seem like he should be struggling to keep his head above water.
Oh, I agree. I don't think David has any problems keeping his head above water. He just likes to write, and seems to like having more than one project in progress at a time. He works as hard as he does because he wants to.
But David is atypical. The vast majority of published writers will not do that well. The catch phrase among writers is "Don't give up your day job!"
I interact elsewhere with the self-published/indie-published crowd, and there's a truly astonishing amount of wishful thinking.
Back before The Internet Ate the World and eBooks were even possible, I saw stats from the American Bookseller's Association indicating that there were over 50,000 new titles published per year in the US. That was close to a thousand new books a week. Who would buy and read them all? Most did not find an audience and get bought and read. They died in the stands and got returned for credit. Publishers all hoped enough books would sell to cover the losses on the ones that didn't and make them enough money to stay in business.
Now with the Internet, eBooks, and self-publishing/indie publishing, it's more like a thousand new books day. The same question applies, with the same answer, but the bar has been hugely raised.
I tell folks "Write because you must, can't imagine not writing, and will do it whether or not anyone else ever reads it. Self publish because you can. Don't expect to make money, because without a benevolent $DEITY to work a miracle for you, you won't!"
I'm delighted by David's success, and the fact he can do it full time and turn out more books I can read. But he's an exception that proves the rule. Most writers will not be so lucky.
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Dennis
I'm not sure it's quite that bad for a newbie, but it is a tough game to break into in a self-sustaining sort of way.
I haven't looked at the actual numbers in a long time, but many years ago the rule of thumb was that 10% of all writers earned 90% of all royalties, and the other 90% of writers split the remaining 10%. That may have shifted with the rise of self-published and independently-published authors, but I suspect it's still broadly true.
I think established writers have three responsibilities when talking to want-to-be writers.
(1) We have to be upfront with them that this is a hard profession when it comes to making a "living wage" solely at your keyboard.
(2) We owe it to them to point out that people can make a living at it, and that our careers serve as proof of that proposition.
(3) We have to point out that John Paul Jones was right: "It seems a law inflexible unto itself that he who will not risk cannot win."
An awful lot of us go through life with the thought that "I could be a successful writer if I ]only had time, only had the opportunity, only thought of the right story, or whatever]." But many of us are afraid to actually try to write because we fear failure/rejection. As long as we haven't submitted to a publishing house and been rejected, we can still know that we could be a writer if. People, I could have been published ten years earlier --- easily --- if I'd been willing to risk the potential disillusionment of rejection letters, but I found all sorts of other things I had to be doing instead. All of them were legitimate; today, I would have let none of them get in the way of actually spending the time to get the books out. I've been doing this for 30 years now (sold the first novel in 1989) and I'd like to go on doing it for another 20 or so, which would be a very respectable career (by the standards of anyone except Jack Williamson ), but I would sooooo love to have those 10 years back, as well.
As I point out to people who have the dreasm, when you're 20, there's lots of time for "I could be a writer a writer if," but if you're never willing to risk, one day you're 75 and it's "I could have been a writer if only." If this is what you really, really want to do, take the plunge and try it now, because if you don't . . . well . . . .
Oh, and Isaac's wife was lucky she lived in a pre-computer age! When Sharon and I go "on vacation," I take along not one but two laptops!
One thing I do have in common with the Doctor, though. He once said his greatest fear was that the publishers would figure out that he'd write whether they paid him or not.
I think that's true of almost every successful writer!