The good
news is, thousands of writers report they’re making a pretty good living.
Unfortunately, that’s a proverbial
iceberg tip, being held up by several hundred thousand writers deep underwater.
Have you ever tried breathing while being held underwater by thousands of
writers?
The median income for authors is
less than the amount they spend on computer equipment, Starbucks membership
cards, and books about how to write for a living.
Now, I’m not telling you this so
you’ll feel sorry for me, a writer. No, I’m telling you this so you’ll feel
sorry for me and buy my books. That’s
the way it is, for a working writer: It’s not work if you don’t sell it. Until
then it’s a hobby that saps your health and makes all your relatives question
your sanity, but you still can’t stop
In other words, it’s an addiction.
There’s no Writer’s Anonymous
meeting to go to, because a real writer is unwilling to quit. Oh, they’ll keep
saying they will … but they can be found late at night, hiding in their home
office also known as the basement, attic, or spare bedroom, working by the
light of a computer screen. “I can quit anytime I want. Just … one more novel.
And this one will sell for sure!”
So, if we write for the joy of it,
why do we try to sell? It’s an art, right? We’re supposed to starve for our
art. Somebody said it, so it must be true.
Yeah, you go ahead and starve.
Are there really that many artists
who don’t care to make a living at their art? I’ll bet not. I’ll bet, deep
down, that most artists dream of selling enough paintings, pottery, or macramé
wall hangings to make a living. If it’s your joy, you want to do it all the
time, right? With just enough break time for lunch?
So when I published my latest book,
I decided to go on an all-out selling frenzy, to see if I could possibly push
enough copies to encourage me toward that eventual goal of taking early
retirement. The good news is, in eight years I can take full retirement, at which point I can expect a regular check of
half what I’m currently making.
In other words, one way or another,
in eight years I’m going to be taking another job—whether it’s writing or not.
The experiment started when my wife
and I decided to drop the e-book price on my already-published book, The No-Campfire Girls. It wasn’t exactly
flying off the shelves, partially because it can’t be found on a lot of
shelves. We dropped the e-book price to 99 cents, which is less than you’d pay
for a trip to most soda machines. We also increased how much of the profit goes
to support my wife’s former Girl Scout camp, from a third to half.
Yeah, I know, that flies in the
face of my earlier desire for a living wage, but sometimes it’s nice to do
something nice.
I sent notice of this to all the
local media, and to the local media down in Missouri, where the camp is. I also
hit a heavy rotation on social media, blaring the word as far and hard as I
could. I became so annoying that some of my internet friends flew in from other
countries and knocked on my front door, just so they could slap me.
“We get it! You have a new book!
But you’re interfering with our cute kitten videos!”
I sold four copies.
Not long after that my newest book,
Slightly Off the Mark: The Unpublished
Columns, came out. This was a book of my unpublished Slightly Off the Mark
columns. You probably figured that out. I’m writing a column now for the
Kendallville Mall, but I had a lot of material left over after being downsized
from my old job.
I spent two weeks being as
obnoxious as I possibly could about this book, which to be honest I’m pretty
proud of. I blabbed about it on Blogger, Facebook, Twitter, and I’m pretty sure
I got it up on a site that normally caters to people who dress in Wookie
costumes to go swinging in Rio. I sent it to newspapers in Las Cruces, New
Mexico. Well, the one newspaper. I sent it to CNN. I sent it to that guy who
used to publish Penthouse magazine: “Dear Penthouse Letters, I never thought
this would happen to me, but I published a book!”
I sent my grandkids out with
sandwich boards. I decaled my website (www.markrhunter.com)
on the side of the car. I wrote the book title in white paint on several area
streets, thus causing an incident I’d rather not talk about. (It did NOT look
like a railroad crossing sign!)
The result? Mediocre. I have not turned in two weeks’ notice at my
day job.
Now, we’ll see what happens when my
next book comes out, on August 24th. But that’s another media blitz.
Oh, and flyers. Don't forget the flyers. |
I'm not even there yet.
ReplyDeleteI figure we're all at different points in the process ...
DeleteMark, I'm certainly not living on my royalties. At least I don't buy books on how to write books.
ReplyDeleteBoy, I did -- a whole bookshelf of them, plus an extra box full, all related to writing in one way or another. Haven't bought a new one for some time, though.
Delete90% of all published authors don't make minimum wage, when you consider the hours put in and the royalties earned.
ReplyDeleteI sat down and did some math once ... I figured that if I got a $1,500 advance on my first novel, I'd be making something like 13 cents an hour.
DeleteI clear a thousand or so a year. There was a time when it was more, during the boom, but it's slacked off again the last two years. Making a living it's not, Lol!
ReplyDeleteI used to make $3,800 a year as a columnist and newspaper writer, so I've taken quite a pay cut since they downsized me -- and royalties sure as heck didn't make up for that!
DeleteI clear a thousand or so a year. There was a time when it was more, during the boom, but it's slacked off again the last two years. Making a living it's not, Lol!
ReplyDeleteI also clear a thousand or so a year. A thousand or so pence that is. But the worst part is that if I even consider reminding my wife that her husband is a published.....
ReplyDelete"Yeah, we know; you've published a few books, now get out there and cut the grass."
Somehow I thought it would all be so exotic.
Yeah, me too! I just finished washing the dishes, and the grass is waiting for me tomorrow.
DeleteAn addiction explains it perfectly.
ReplyDeleteDoesn't it, though?
DeleteI think you said it, when you said addiction and joy of writing. My friend gave it to me straight - the people who will buy your books are the ones who'll want to read it. I like that better than being a top seller and dealing with some of the most obnoxious negative comments by people who only bought the book because you're a top seller.
ReplyDeleteAgreed, but I really do need to make enough to do it for a living .., working two full time jobs is killing me.
Delete