May. 28th, 2013

alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (Mascot)
I'm sharing this mostly without comment, except to say this -- I had Life, Interrupted. Never made it to Judy's heights in income. Not sure I can figure out how to make a living writing fiction even by today's standards. But one thing the following essay is not -- it's not a complaint, or an attempt to make any fan feel guilty or uncomfortable about the boiling cauldron that is currently publishing.

Don't want to know what writers talk about late at night?

Stop right here.


Originally posted by [livejournal.com profile] mizkit at Escaping Stockholm: Part 1


I’ve said this before and will no doubt say it again: one of the coolest things about the intarwebs and growing up to be a writer is having become friends with some of my writing heroes. People I wanted to grow up to be, or whose work touched me, or who I admired the holy living bejeezus out of, or I learned from by reading their books, or all of the above. Usually all of the above.

One of those people is Judith Tarr. She’s a tremendous writer and a splendid person, and if you’d told me ten years ago that I would chat with Judy (see!? I get to call her Judy now, and everything!) on a weekly basis, if you’d said, “and you’ll get worried when she hasn’t posted for several days, especially if the weather’s been bad where she and the fat white ponies live,” if you’d said anything like that I’d have–well, I’d have sat in a corner giggling hysterically and peeking through my fingers and saying, “Really? *Really*?” and then giggling some more.

If you’d told me Judith Tarr would end up writing a three-part blog post about the changes in the publishing industry, inspired by my post on the myth of the rich writer, for my blog, I just wouldn’t have believed it. But she’s done just that, and I’m really ridiculously delighted to present her words to you here over the course of this week.


Escape from Stockholm: An Epic Publishing Saga
Find Judith Tarr on LiveJournal | on Twitter | & at Book View Cafe

So Catie and I have been having this conversation. It started with her post on money, and I finally snapped, after years of keeping politely quiet. I said, “I am horrified at what I see writers of your particular generation having to do in order to pay your bills/satisfy your publishers/keep your careers alive.”
Read more... )

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