You can be other kinds of famous. An athlete, youtuber, etc. Even if youre trying to sell speculative fiction, some traction somewhere helps the process.
But yeah, it’s shitty. It’s really hard to make any money writing now.
So you run it by James Paterson, Inc. (or the estate of Tom Clancy or whoever fits best) get his name above yours and now you’re contracted to release new novels at an absolutely breakneck pace, but you have your foot in the door and can become the more famous writer who can release their own novels.
“It’s good, but we can’t market it. If you were already famous in some other way so we could sell based on that, we would buy it.”
Could have phrased it better, but I kinda get it.
“It’s good, but we’re bad at actually selling books so we need you to be famous in another unrelated way to compensate for our incompetence”
FTFY
At least they know their failings and wont waste the authors time.
“they” don’t though. The low level employee/intern who read it might but that entire industry is up its own ass smelling it’s own farts at the top.
“We won’t publish you until you’ve been published”
Think about it
I thought this was an entry level publishing
Yes
You can be other kinds of famous. An athlete, youtuber, etc. Even if youre trying to sell speculative fiction, some traction somewhere helps the process.
But yeah, it’s shitty. It’s really hard to make any money writing now.
applies to the job market too
So you run it by James Paterson, Inc. (or the estate of Tom Clancy or whoever fits best) get his name above yours and now you’re contracted to release new novels at an absolutely breakneck pace, but you have your foot in the door and can become the more famous writer who can release their own novels.
I would’ve thought “finding fresh talent” is something that publishers do out of self-interest, but I guess I’m wrong.
this assumes the industry is vaguely competent and capable of critical thinking