WRITING: Blank books, book sales, and expectations

A blank book reaching #44 on Amazon? Yep. It happened. A blank book -- blank -- became a top seller. They spend years writing a book, then even more years trying to get a literary agent and publisher to back it and then, when their book finally comes out, the author breathes a huge sigh of relief and assumes that their book will be discovered, widely read and will sell around the world in bucketloads. Well, any new author needs to wake up and smell the rankings. Most books, however well written, hardly sell many copies at all. And that's…

Book royalties, advances, and empty wallets

In a previous blog post I pointed out that authors do not make a lot of money. And that's true. They don't. The reality is that you DON'T simply write a book and watch the money start coming in. Not unless you hit a one-in-a-million publisher feeding frenzy for your book or accidentally write the next Harry Potter. Instead, you write a book that will eventually provide you with a modest amount of money -- and "modest" may very well mean, "enough to finally get that tune-up you've been putting off" -- then you do another, and another, and another,…

Authors don’t make a lot of money

People have the impression that writing a book = making money. That by writing a book you'll suddenly be rolling in dough. Advances! Royalties! Cash! But it just doesn't work like that. Not only is this an absurd notion for a little book like mine -- I'll be happy if it covers the expenses we incurred while writing it -- it doesn't even hold true for New York Times bestsellers, as author Lynn Viehl outlines in this blog post. Her bottom line is simple: Despite a $50,000 advance, selling about 73,000 copies and hitting #19 on the New York Times…