Sent to you by Jonathan via Google Reader: One New York Times
Bestseller Per Year Will Barely Keep You Above The Poverty Line [Book
Vortex] via io9 by Charlie Jane Anders on 11/18/09

Paranormal romance author Lynn Viehl bared all last week — she posted
her complete royalty statement from her publisher, for her New York
Times bestselling book Twilight Fall. And the details might make you
reconsider a career as a novelist.

Twilight Fall was a top 20 bestseller on the New York Times mass market
paperback list — so, not the main fiction bestseller list, but still
impressive. According to Penguin Group, the publisher, the book has
sales of 89,142 copies, minus returns of 27,479, for total sales of
61,663 copies. (As far as I know, the books are counted as sold until
the bookstore chooses to send them back — but I could be wrong about
that.) The publisher is holding back reserves against royalties for
another 7,350 copies to be returned.

In any case, the bottom line is that Viehl got a $50,000 advance for
Twilight Fall, and she's unlikely to earn it out for up to a year —
which means no royalty payments. After taxes, expenses, and her agent's
cut, she gets to keep about half that advance. As she notes:

My income per book always reminds me of how tough it is to make at
living at this gig, especially for writers who only produce one book
per year. If I did the same, and my one book performed as well as TF,
and my family of four were solely dependent on my income, my net would
be only around $2500.00 over the income level considered to be the US
poverty threshold (based on 2008 figures.) Yep, we'd almost qualify for
foodstamps.

It's pretty great of Viehl to share her royalty statement with the
world — apparently the last time she did that, she got some flak
online, and here's hoping that doesn't happen this time. The only
caveat I'd toss in there is that most of us don't reckon our incomes on
an after-tax basis — if we did, I suspect we'd all be horribly
depressed. So if you leave taxes out of her estimation of her income,
she's probably making closer to $35K or $40K per book, rather than
$25K. [Straight Goods]



Things you can do from here:
- Subscribe to io9 using Google Reader
- Get started using Google Reader to easily keep up with all your
favorite sites

--

You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"R-SPEC: The Rochester Speculative Literature Association" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/r-spec?hl=en.


Reply via email to