Avatar

in terms of books, she was doing fine

@agardenandlibrary / agardenandlibrary.tumblr.com

- Cara, 30s - Book blogging & sewing & my life - she/her I do book reviews in podcast form: Backlog Books

Me: I AM HERE Cara: great! So this podcast episode is about the vorkosigan saga Me, prepped with notes for Sunbringer: *sliiiiiiiides the notebook away across the desk* Vorkosigan saga, yes

And then we talked for 2hrs about the vorkosigan saga*

*mostly.

Lois McMaster Bujold has been reading Greenwing & Dart???

She finished Stargazy Pie and said "maybe I will continue the series!" and then you can see that she read the next 3 books over the next 4 days like. Yeah. That's the vibe.

#172-#025-#026. The Pikachu line is known for their rubber cheeks, conductive tails and love for chewing wires, ruining plugs and stealing batteries. At least they're cute doing it.....................

The Lays of the Hearthfire books by Victoria Goddard completely consumed my last couple weeks in the best way and my artblock relented enough for me to actually paint something 🥹

the thing about being nonbinary is that you really do start to forget that other people have such strict walls around what is and isn’t allowed for genders. i thought we all agreed that we made that up. could you climb out of the cave real quick and feel the sunshine for a minute.

i cant belive that you of all people are at risk of homelessness >:(

homelessness isnt a problem that should exist in general, but you, specifically, should have like a million dollars from the star trek novels alone

Avatar

(chuckle) Wouldn't that be lovely! (And it's kind of you to be thinking that way.)

But alas, that's not how it works.

When you're working in/for other licensed universes—which is always on a work-for-hire basis—the only really significant payment(s) you're likely to see will happen when you've turned in a given book and it's been formally accepted. And even then, the payment's rarely going to be higher than low-to-mid five figures... which (after your literary agent gets their cut, and after your taxes on the income get paid) won't take you very far even in a single year, let alone the years that follow.

If you're very lucky in your publisher, or have a very good agent—which I do—you may even manage to get some royalties on such a novel. But they'll be at the low end of the scale—maybe 2-3% of the cover price. (Bearing in mind that even for original novels in one's own universe, an author rarely gets more than 8-10% of a given book's cover price in royalties.) And when the book goes out of print, the royalties stop.

So just because the owner of the IP makes a lot of money off it, doesn't mean that any significant amount of it necessarily trickles down to the writer. (sigh) Nor does the fact that a book is good, or the writer is good, or both, make any significant difference to this kind of mathematics. Eventually, pretty much inevitably, sooner or later sales of a book drop off and the publisher lets it go out of print.

(shrug) It's not like I didn't know this was eventually going to happen when I wrote my Star Trek work. I did that because I loved Trek (and still do), and I was sure I could write a better Trek novel than anyone else had up until that point. (And maybe that was even true. Who knows.) To have done the work was the thing that primarily mattered.

But let this be a reminder to folks that only a low percentage of writers make enough from their writing alone to live on: and that something like 90% of writers live at or near the poverty line and sometimes slip below it. ...And for all of us, even for strong writers who seem moderately successful and have other income streams, bare patches happen: times when publishers don't pay (for example, I still haven't been paid anything for Disney/Marvel's reissue of my Spider-Man books), times when you can't work, or times when accident or illness or other unexpected circumstance eats the cash you've stashed away to serve as a cushion.

This is not a safe lifestyle. With talent and luck and endless slogging away at/over the writing mechanism of your choice, and with the support of your readers (who I'm very much thinking of at the moment!—and thanks again to the Ebooks Direct customers and Ko-Fi friends who just now saved our butts), it can be survived. Which, from day to day, @petermorwood and I do our best to keep on doing.

...In any case: people who even at this end of time can say things such as you did at the top of this, make me feel like about a million dollars. 🙂 (And since I have both an upper respiratory infection and laryngitis today, that's quite a trick!) ...So thanks.

Avatar

I am being very brave and not buying myself a little treat (<- already bought myself a little treat this week)(<- it hasn't arrived so it's not real yet)

Omg.. okay I follow a bunch of channels that are made by people who do free cleaning for people in really dire hoarding/damaged house circumstances mostly older disabled people and the free cleanings are often recorded to show how to take care of extremely bad damage to houses yourself, anyway one of them recently had to put out a statement where she said the GREAT MAJORITY of requests for CHARITY CLEANING she gets was fucking LANDLORDS!!!!!! Particularly those that recently had someone move out and want free cleaning before marketing again. And she basically made a big statement politely stating she’ll never do a cleaning for a landlord and they need to stop asking. Ngl that’s some crazy composure if I was in her position I’d just come over and bulldoze the house

I still can’t get over this. Like these are emergency cleanings meant for disabled people in unlivable conditions and the purpose of recording it is to help people learn how to maintain or repair their own homes in bad circumstances. Can you imagine watching someone who regularly deals with biohazards for free and thinking “yeah it’s appropriate to request they clean the housing im holding hostage before I rent it again”

Books Read in March 2025

Revenant Gun by Yoon Ha Lee – science fiction. Ish. Gosh. I do still enjoy this series. I’m mad that the audiobook wasn’t a good experience. Also it’s kind of a shame that Glass Cannon is its own separate story, rather than being in the book itself, but I understand it would’ve been A Bit Much. Lee loves to put that guy in a situation. 

Goddess of the River by Vaishnavi Patel – fantasy. Patel’s second book. I think I liked Kaikeyi better, but this was still a good read. The river gets turned into a mortal, and finds herself caring about one of her mortal children. Follows her and her son as he grows up and tries to prevent a war. Check your content warnings for this one.

The Tomb of Dragons by Katherine Addison – fantasy. Finishing the Cemeteries of Amalo trilogy. Where did that guy even come from? A good mix of the mystery and basic clerical/foot work that goes into solving a mystery. Look, I do think that guy came out of nowhere, but I enjoyed the whole book regardless.

Blackcurrant Fool, Love-in-a-Mist, and Plum Duff by Victoria Goddard – fantasy. *salutes* It took me a month to pick up Blackcurrant Fool again, only to find I’d stopped right before things really took off. First part of the book was definitely kinda slow. Goddard loves to introduce a plotline and leave it unresolved for a while.

I’m all caught up on Greenwing & Dart, including the short stories, so now I guess I have to wait with everyone else for the next one! (I do still have some Red Company books/stories to read. And all the Ysthar books for completeness.)

Currently reading:

Lord of Chaos, book 6 of the wheel of time! See y’all next month when I’ve hopefully finished it.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.