Jump to content

Talisman

Advanced Member
  • Posts

    3,512
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Talisman

  1. I have mixed feelings about e-books. From the authors point of view they are brilliant, as once they are on the device they cannot be lent to other people and so you sell more books and earn more money! On the other hand, there are issues with copyright to be ironed out, since PDF's are far more secure and are open to piracy and copying, which cannot happen, or is less likely to happen, with printed copies. Less overheads also mean that the author earns a bigger percentage since e-books cut out most of the middle men, who earn far more than we do as the people who write the damned things!

     

    E-books are also more easily searchable than paper copies, which is great for other authors or anyone in fact using them for research purposes, especially for religious or scientific texts.

     

    I can certainly see then the potential for academic and educational works, but am not convinced that e-books will ever replace paper copies for other types of books. I proof read mine at least 5 times via a computer screen before it was published, and therefore would not expect anyone else to sit there reading a book that size by screen !

  2. I am reading the Kite Runner at the moment, and it is by far the best book that I have read in ages - since I was a teenager in fact, and I am 43 this year!

     

    It is one of those books that has so many layers - at times political, at times deeply touching, and also very much a tale about retribution and the law of cause and effect.

     

     

    It has had me very close to tears also at several points - the rape scene, the stoning scene, when Baba dies and he realises that he has been lied to all his life. I also like the fact that there are no graphic sex scenes - what happens is not described in too much detail, so it becomes much more powerful and absorbing.

     

     

    It is one of those books though that one can get so completely absorbed in that I forget to go back to work when I read it during my lunch break! It is almost as if reading it, I am not a bystander but actually there.

     

    I can't wait to see the film!

  3. Speaking as an author Kell, there are no copyright issues that I am aware of - I have donated my own books to things such as this many a time, and it is not something that an author would necessarily expect to get paid for anyway. This is completely different to a public lending library, where you are right, the author does get paid a very small sum (around 6 pence every time their book is borrowed).

     

    The PLR scheme is imo a swiz anyway though, since each year they take a random sample of libraries from across the UK from which to base their figures and calculate what authors are owed. What this in practise means is that even though yoru book may be available in loads of other libraries across the country and borrowed on a regular basis from them (as mine in fact is) because it is not available in the random sample, you don't get paid ! Bit of a swiz if you ask me, and they are cutting PLR for the next 3 years as well I hear, so there will be even less money available.

     

    Sometimes I wish we had a Writers Guild so we could all go on strike !

  4. I read predominantly non fiction also, but then again, I am a non fiction writer (mostly mind, body and spirit/religion). After five years spent writing my book, and updating it last year, I mist admit though that I have really enjoyed going back to reading some really good novels written by writing friends.

  5. Thank for your comments Oblomov, it is good to know that there is at least one person on here who understands where I am coming from and can get their point across without throwing their toys out of their pram, just because they are challenged a bit.

     

    As for Adam, I don't know about authors having sympathy for poor students, but if you want me to understand you then quite frankly you should learn some manners. There is no need to make this personal by making comments such as okay I get if, you write books, good for you. If it wasn't for the likes of me who yes, make a choice as to whether to do this, then you couldn't be student in the first place, as someone had to write your course material.

     

    As for your ridiculous comment that talent earns money - sadly you are very wrong. What earns money in today's world is going on Big Brother, taking your top off on page three or marrying a footballer. This comment just goes to show how little you know about the industry you purport to love so much. I suggest you do a lot more research and get your facts right before you start criticising others and making personal comments.

  6. The authors that I know such as John Grisham and such get a set amount from their publishing company for money while they write.

     

     

    I know an awful lot of authors Adam on all five continents of the world, and I have never met or corresponded with any who were paid to write their books. The better known ones maybe who have a good track record and established careers, but these are very much in the minority and it takes years and several books to get to this point.

     

    Most of the time you write the book, tout it around agents and publishers for a year or so, and if you are lucky, two years later they might publish it and give you an advance of maybe

×
×
  • Create New...