. . .about Barry Eisler turning down a $500,000 advance last week?
For the details, check out Barry's talk with Joe Konrath at both Barry and Joe's blogs.
Dean Wesley Smith gives his own thoughts on the significance of Eisler walking away from such a deal.
Then a few hours after the Eisler confession, the New York Times broke a story that Amanda Hocking allegedly has a four-book deal in the middle of an auction.
My $0.02:
Contrary to other opinions I've seen on the interwebs, I doubt Eisler is making a mistake. Something both my business and tax professors tried to ram through my head is that money in your hand is much preferably to money you're waiting for. By indie publishing his next book this spring, Eisler can have that $500,000 in his hands much, MUCH sooner than if he waited until his traditional publisher pays him the typical thirds over the next two years.
As for walking away from a New York deal, I watched several midlist friends and acquaintances explore the indie route over the last four months. I'm talking about people who hit the the NYT list and were nominated for Ritas. So far, I haven't heard anyone complain about the chance they took. And folks like Angie and Colleen already have a platform to springboard into indie publishing. So I can't see a major NYT author like Eisler doing worse than my mid-list pals.
Then there's people like Melissa Ohnoutka and me who are starting from scratch. Melissa has already made Faithful Deceptions available in both electronic and paper format. I've already had two people ask if I'll have paper versions of Blood Magick and Zombie Love, and the books aren't even out yet. *grin*
While I find the NYT story a little suspect (ex-attorney speaking: you don't leak this kind of stuff without hoping to twist something in your favor and that's assuming it's not an out-and-out lie), I can see the Big 6 wanting a slice of Amanda's $2 million pie. (Edit: Publisher's Weekly confirmed the NYT story this morning.)
Personally, I have to side with Dean Wesley Smith on this one. Print is not disappearing over night. And indie publishers may be performing the same disservice to their readers that traditional publishers are guilty of by not having multiple formats of their products.
Sooooo. . .
Does that mean I'm giving up the indie plan? No, I'm too niche for NY. But I need to spend a little more time than I planned exploring POD options. And yes, I think it'll be worth it.
Kickstarter Friday
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A Number of Fiction Kickstarters Every Friday… I only list the campaigns I
like and that I think would be worth studying for writers thinking of doing
a ca...
3 hours ago