Susan, that was my thinking...but I don't know... Ambivalence Girl rides again. Maybe. Some things are better with people...maybe I'll see how NaNoWri goes.
The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
I think he'll improve; the story is a good one. He's just in his late fifties and this is his first try. He's a sweetie and takes correction and editing very well, so far.
In the meanwhile....
Two-book deal ("Famous Flower of Serving Men" and "Matty Groves") being hammered out as we speak.
Small money, which I expected in this economy; I'd like slightly more than they're offering, but it sure as hell isn't a deal-breaker.
Problem: the two-book deal would be done with joint accounting. Basically, that means having to earn back the advance on BOTH books before I saw a penny in royalties. And since they'd likely be bringing these out a year apart, in 2004 and 2005, it would probably be 2007 before I saw a penny in royalties.
Which smells really kinda, well, pissant, for a book deal this small. If we were talking six figures, that would be one thing. But shit, not for a measly $12K.
That's nasty, Deb. Is it non-negotiable?
I'm editing the work of one of our two newest writing group members.
It's awful.
Damn. I shouldn't have missed last week, should I? @#$@#$ migraine.
Eek, Deb. So basically you get $12k now, and then nothing for three years, and quite possibly nothng then? For two books?
That's robbery. Can you negotiate?
Betsy, Jenn's negotiating even as we speak; really, just truly pinchy for a deal this size. And I just got a nice warm chatty loving catchup email from Ruth, without a word mentioned about the offer.
Gronk.
Betsy, he'll get better. He understood right away what we were telling him, and I'm being ruthless in my line edit, though I'll attach it to a very warm email about it. He's very sweet.
I'm sure Jenn will fight for the best deal she can get -- since under joint accounting, as an agent she won't get any royalties either until maybe 2007. This is definitely the time when having an agent with a financial interest in your books is going to justify her commission.
Totally. I mean, the entire point of taking a smaller advance is that they're out of pocket upfront for less, and you get yours as royalties sooner.
Come onnnnnn, Jenn. I have shitloads to do and Ruth is in her office, and come onnnnnnnn...
best of luck, Deb. I wish I had something useful for you.
Good luck, deb. It really seems like you're asking for something perfectly reasonable, so it should work, but I'm new to this.
And did you find a place to do the reading/signing thing in Seattle yet? IIRC, B&N didn't work out.
Susan, we're still waiting on B&N Seattle; they have a policy of not scheduling events between Thanksgiving and Christmas generally, but Rachel is letting them know that Seattle would bring in a bunch of people, so we'll wait and see.
If not, we'll try for a Borders reading.