Saturday, March 1, 2014

Two new Paul Dale Anderson novels

I have completed two new novels in the Rat series. Icepick and Pickaxe are now available free online at http://www.pauldaleanderson.com

Elizabeth Flygare's Blog

My friend Lizza has started a blog of her own. Here is the link:

http://elizabethaisling.blogspot.com

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Best Preactices for Orphan Works

The Society of American Archivists have published a best practices for orphan works. The best practices/standards are available as a pdf file for download at http://www.archivists.org/standards/

Sunday, July 19, 2009

What's it all about, really?

Money. That's what it's about these days. Not only in the publsihing game, but in healthcare, manufacturing, retail,government, academia, etc. It's all about the bottom line.

The bottom line for a fiction writer is to earn a decent living by selling or licensing (renting) original creative works. Fiction writers have traditionally sold or licensed their works to publishers who then managed all further sales, including distribution to retail markets, subsidiary sales, translations for foreign sales, etc. Publishers assumed that they also had license to market electronic sales as part of the publishing contract, with no additonal or only minimal additional compensation to the writer. Thanks to professional writers organizations like Science Fiction Writers of America (SFWA), Authors Guild, ASJA, etc., writers began negotiating electronic rights as part of every contract. Most writers only earn pennies from electronic sales at this time, but that may change in the future as more readers are willing to purchase e-books.

Google's Google Book Library Project opened up a new can of works for writers. Many out of print but still in copyright works were digitized by Google, and writers are still uncertain how much money they will or won't make when Google sells electronic copies.

The entire publishing industry is going through massive changes, thanks to new technology and the effects of the economy. What will happen in the future? How will writers earn their living when traditional publishers have closed up shop?

I hope you will stay with me as we continue to explore these ideas in the days, weeks, months, and years to come.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Robot Dance Moves

To show my ignorance, I had no clue what a robot dance was until I checked it out on You Tube. Here is an example:


Saturday, July 11, 2009

I'm Back

This blog was blocked. It happened yesterday, and I couldn't post to this blog until Google, the parent company of Blogger, verified that I was a real human being and not a robot spammer.

I am happy to report that I am now able to post again to this blog.

I am still waiting, however, for an explanation of why I was blocked.

Honestly, now, do my posts seem that mechanical? Am I that robotic and automatized?

Friday, July 10, 2009

Fame and fortune

Some people think all writers are rich and famous, and nothing could be further from the truth. Some, a very few, do manage to become rich and famous after selling to motion pictures which also hypes sales of the book. What are your chances of becoming rich and famous as a writer?

According to MSN Money (http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/RetirementandWills/RetireEarly/WhyPoorPeopleWinTheLottery.aspx) "the odds of winning the Mega Millions are 1 in 135,145,920. Buying two tickets bumps your odds only to 2 in 135,145,920."

Your chances of winning the lottery are better than your chances of becoming rich and famous as a fiction writer.

Writing, like playing the lottery, is a numbers game. The first piece you write has a 1 in a hundred billion chances of making you rich and famous. Each succeeding book you write increases your chances. Ray Bradbury used to tell beginning writers to write their first million words and then throw them away. They don't have a chance of selling (or writing anything really good) until they have written more than a million words.

Your chances of being hit by lightning are thousands of times better than the chance of becoming rich and famous as a fiction writer, and hundres of times better than winning the lottery.

It is possible to earn a reasonable living writing non-fiction, and some writers can mix sales of fiction and non-fiction to achieve an annual six figure gross. But it is extremely rare to be able to earn a living solely writing fiction.

The best way to get rich writing fiction is to already be rich and famous and then sell your fictionalized memoirs (think of Dick Chaney, Donald Trump, most movie and NFL stars). Even lottery winners have a better chance that you or I of selling a book and becoming rich and famous because they are already rich and famous.

Here an interesting perspective from Jenny Diski's blog:

http://jennydiski.typepad.com/biology_of_the_worst_kind/2006/10/how_to_become_r.html

So, wannabe writers, forget the rich and famous part. Write fiction because you love to tell stories and you have good stories to tell. But don't quit your day job until you've sold at least one book to the movies or tv.