With author royalty rates low enough to force many a ’successful’ author to maintain their writing as a part-time sideline to their day-job, the need is has never been more urgent to ensure they are being paid every penny they are owed in a timely fashion.
I have to say, as someone who will likely one day have a deal in place with a publisher, this is very worrying, and smacks of little respect for the author as a business partner in the creation and selling of books.
Some additional stats from that survey:
The piece covers the story of Catherine O’Flynn, and author who had her book, What Was Lost, rejected by fourteen literary agents, yet won the increasingly prominent Costa First Novel Award. In response, the Independent’s Literary Editor, Boyd Tonkin, offered his input on the expectations of new authors.
“Many illusions about the wealth of up-and-coming authors arise because the media publish wildly exaggerated estimates of the sums involved. Next time you read about a £1m advance, try dividing that by ten – at least.”
He goes on to say that the hope of giving up the day job is less than realistic:
Plenty of acclaimed writers of fiction never give up their previous occupation, or else acquire a new on (in teaching or journalism, for example)”
That last statement troubles me as it is far too black and white to offer a complete picture, and one should note the use of ‘acclaimed writers’, which, as O’Flynn’s experience with literary agents demonstrates, can be entirely disconnected with successful or popular writers.
Many writers may not give up the day job more out of choice than financial necessity. They may simply not be the kinds of authors who have a whole stream of novels queuing to get out, or, and with the level of effort required to produce a novel, not wish to be a novelist full-time. Being a successful, or acclaimed writer, surely does not exclude the possibility of doing it part-time.
Over at Vigorous Writing, Jesse Hines talks about this very subject and how a strict reading plan can and will help you improve your prose. Though not necessarily through direct techniques, the general increased awareness of other writers’ works can indeed help you to give polish to your own work. It’s hard work, that’s for sure, particularly if you are not accustomed to reading, and as a writer one is always pulled in the direction of wanting to write more rather than become involved in someone else’s writing.
My personal experience with reading has, in the past, actually been quite detrimental to my writing. While searching for the answer to becoming a fully productive writer, I read a great deal across a wide range of genre and author. Unfortunately this merely confused my own writing. Each book I liked, I unconsciously tried to emulate, often discarding past work to re-write in the new style. Each new author delivered new ideas, and so they were also injected into existing work. The result was, as you can guess, a complete lack of any finished piece.
These days, where I am embroiled in the adventures of a group of Edwardian characters, I limit my reading to a greater extent. Truthfully this is as much about simply not having the time to fit in the challenging day-job, writing the stories, and read, as it is avoiding the past pitfalls from the past. Choice of books is determined by what I am writing about, and most of my reading has shifted to research of the period.
Reading is certainly important to understand what other writers are doing and how they tackle certain challenges in plot and characterisation, but the danger of losing one’s own voice must be carefully managed. I can truly say, looking back, I would have had several books written (published is another matter altogether) is I had more carefully managed my reading habits in the past.