alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (Mascot)
Over at Amazing Stories, Michael J. Sullivan talks about reading the details of a royalty statement--and a contract. Listen closely.

A fan recently asked me why so many experienced writers are not trying harder to go back to New York publishing. Here's a good example. If you, or your agent or literary lawyer, miss this one word--it's a big deal. If Michael J. Sullivan and his spouse had pushed harder, would he have lost the contract? Not if the editors recognized what ended up making the publisher a great deal of money.

Listen closely when writers and editors talk about these things. Because an editor cannot work for you--they must work for their employer. But they can talk about the abstract all the time. They are talking to you--educate yourselves. In many cases a change more favorable to you is already printed up to be attached to your contract--you just have to call the contracts department on it. The editor wants you to call them on it. Your editor (a good editor) wants a win-win--happy author, publisher with writer selling well.

In a contract negotiation, each side has one or two things that they will not budge on for love or money. As long as those things do not overlap, a deal can be made. Took eleven months once with HarperCollins. But the deal was made.

Wish it had made this kind of difference for me.
alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (Default)
The Passive Voice takes on several things that belong in contracts today (and belonged in them yesterday, too, but back then agents tried to get these things for writers.) He also has a nice link to an older (May, 2011) post by Kristine Kathryn Rusch that is worth your time. (In fact, I can't think of a single business post I've ever read written by Kris Rusch that was not worth my time. FYI.)
alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (Default)
Now you knew there was going to be another shoe dropping somewhere.

Before you rush to use it, there's a little detail in the contract you should be aware of...can you say "another exclusive ebook format?"
alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (Default)
A patent attorney has put up a post on the care and feeding of contracts -- the major contact point for any writer and the publishing world. He comes recommended from a writing friend, so you might want to take a look and see if this speaks to you.

http://www.barrettlaw.com/74.htm
alfreda89: (Books and lovers)
Today is your last chance to get e-books in many discount and other loyalty programs. The new agency modeling agreement goes into effect April 1st, tomorrow, and this will automatically slap several more dollars on the prices of e-books. This is happeneing so fast retailers haven't finished their new agreements yet. Kobo is offering $2.00 off every title they carry purchased before midnight tonight -- the the PW article didn't say WHICH midnight, so start checking now! Expect a lot of e-books to rise from $9.99 to $12.99.

Me, no book reader yet. So no savings.

PW article: http://tinyurl.com/ydgew6l

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