7ootles
7ootles t1_jdulvan wrote
Reply to comment by colechristensen in Cancelled books? by FaithlessnessOdd9006
I thought Go Set A Watchman was an earlier draft of To Kill A Mockingbird, published by her because her publishers pressured her into it? She died after Watchman came out, by the way.
7ootles t1_jdh6ex2 wrote
Reply to Toxic book fans by sunforthemoon
They get that way. Similarly, communities around books that have been adapted can be pretty shitty too. r/brakebills became a total nightmare when The Magicians TV series became big, accepting the series blindly and almost wholly rejecting the trilogy of books it draws from. Those people claim to be fans, but some can be really shitty about the books. I was an OG fan from when the first book came out, was a member of the tiny little Facebook fan group from when it started - but when the series came out and the fangirls started squeeing over it, I was removed for "toxic behaviour" after saying I felt the adaptation missed the point the books were getting at. An admin even messaged me after removing me, claiming I was upsetting other fans.
7ootles t1_j6k5ysk wrote
Reply to comment by Negative-Net-9455 in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
I will say I had to roll my eyes a little at how much of a Mary Sue Charlie was. Like I said, it's not my favourite book - but I enjoyed it as just another story.
7ootles t1_j6k5r6f wrote
Reply to comment by Negative-Net-9455 in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
You're not the person I commissioned.
Also, editors don't charge per hour. They usually charge per thousand words or per page.
7ootles t1_j6hh32d wrote
Reply to comment by unclefipps in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
Why don't you do the edit and I'll tell you if it's any better? I'll wait.
7ootles t1_j6hgiet wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
>Every one of his pop culture references is an old movie he saw on ‘TCM’ or ‘his dad’s favorite’ whatever.
OK? I mean I'm in my early/mid-thirties and almost all of my pop culture references are from old films and music I've watched/listened to with my parents. I'd get a 1960s reference more readily than a 2000s one.
7ootles t1_j6hecl5 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
I tend to read past that stuff. Some teenagers act and speak differently to "average" teenagers. And some people really love dogs. We see on r/nextfuckinglevel and r/humansbeingbros and elsewhere that some people will risk themselves to save a dog or a cat or some other animal they only just met.
Thing to remember about stories is that, if the main characters were normal people, there would be no story.
7ootles t1_j6hb9jv wrote
Reply to comment by Negative-Net-9455 in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
>Apart from the recent, dreadful Fairy Tale of course.
I wouldn't say it's my favourite book, but it's certainly far from dreadful. What's wrong with it?
7ootles t1_j2dv5g2 wrote
Reply to comment by -1_2_3 in Best way to purchase books to support the authors by Vizzenya
I think they are new, and I can't find any info on how to publish through them.
7ootles t1_j2dq04f wrote
Reply to comment by -1_2_3 in Best way to purchase books to support the authors by Vizzenya
I've never heard of it before tbh. It looks like an audiobook platform, rather than a self-publishing platform, so I'd have to contact them to find out.
7ootles t1_j2ajbkv wrote
>I used to buy my books exclusively on Kindle. I loved the format, but I hate giving my money to Amazon. Then I started buying paperbacks from Barnes and Noble (there are no indie stores within 100mi of where I live), but I wondered if I should be buying hardcovers to get more royalties to the authors. I also frequent the library, but I have no idea what they make off of borrowing a book from there, whether it be physical or digital.
I publish my work on Kindle and my royalty is 70%. I also publish in paperback, again through Amazon, and my royalty there is 60%. When I start doing some of my work in hardback, that will also be at a 60% royalty.
The only way in which my royalties are higher with a physical copy is just that the price is higher. If I charge £3.99 for an ebook, I get £2.80 in royalties - if I charge £14.99 for the same book in hardback, I get £8.99 in royalties. But if I charged the same price for both, I'd be making a lot more off the Kindle version.
7ootles t1_j29ye9x wrote
Reply to comment by slick-rick81 in help needed by slick-rick81
I might even be able to take a crack at transcribing it myself, depending on how the paper/ink has survived. I'll keep my eyes open for any new posts you make about it. Can't help being a little curious now.
7ootles t1_j29qw9v wrote
Reply to help needed by slick-rick81
If you take high-res pictures of each page and post them somewhere, there'll be someone who can read the handwriting and transcribe it. It might be worth doing that before trying to get it restored anyway, just in case.
7ootles t1_j1ntn6o wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in I just read Stephen King's "Carrie". I have a Doubt by Varun_shiroyasha
Do we? Not something I've ever sat down and counted up.
7ootles t1_j1ntbu8 wrote
It's Stephen King - just adopt a headcanon that King missed out the words "a vision of" when he wrote that Ralph stopped her.
7ootles t1_iydh0tv wrote
Reply to comment by marcamos in My 8 year old wrote and illustrated a book(!) Mom and I weren't aware he was doing this… by marcamos
Be sure to let me know when autographed copies become available.
7ootles t1_iydboj9 wrote
Reply to comment by marcamos in My 8 year old wrote and illustrated a book(!) Mom and I weren't aware he was doing this… by marcamos
The interest will grow with encouragement, I'm certain. Your son has talent. I can recognize that as a reader and as a writer with a master's degree in it. Your son has a true gift. There is a career waiting for him in his future, as long as he gets the right kind of encouragement. The key thing is not to let it go to his head, but for it to be real encouragement to keep working and improving and stretching himself. Some of the best writers in the world wrote their first stories in the exact same way your son has.
7ootles t1_iydb3ag wrote
Reply to comment by marcamos in My 8 year old wrote and illustrated a book(!) Mom and I weren't aware he was doing this… by marcamos
Swines.
Well my previous comment still stands. I hope your lad all the best and keep going. Maybe this is a sign that you and your son should work together to make a book we can buy. I don't know if you can advertize here, but if you make it available such that we can buy copies, I'd be more than happy to "recommend" it on here.
7ootles t1_iyd62si wrote
Reply to My 8 year old wrote and illustrated a book(!) Mom and I weren't aware he was doing this… by marcamos
Bruh.
Set up an Amazon page. When the whole story is told, put it into a single volume and make a book we can buy. I'd buy a copy of that.
I'm not even kidding. I had to keep reminding myself that came out of an eight-year-old's mind. His work is to a higher standard than many adults.
Tell your eight-year-old from me - I'd pay for a physical copy of that. And tell him to keep up the good work.
7ootles t1_iso15ga wrote
I recorded Stephen King's The Dark Tower series for my girlfriend. Reading it aloud made me notice details much better than just reading it had, and performing the characters' parts (ie acting their parts rather than just reading the dialogue) put me in much better touch with who those characters are.
7ootles t1_je95ui0 wrote
Reply to Is it okay to reach out to your favorite authors? by Smooth_Service8931
Yes.
I contacted Lev Grossman shortly after The Magician King came out, and he was really nice with me - and encouraging too, when I told him I've wanted to write for a long time too.