The Awful Truth: Making Money As An Author
by Leslie Lehr
When
my first novel, 66 Laps, won the
Pirates Alley Faulkner Award, I thought I hit the jackpot. Being flown to New
Orleans to be wined and dined by the glittering
literati at the Words & Music Conference seemed like the beginning of a
gilded career. At the first breakfast, I was blinded by the enthusiasm of my
new agent and my book deal with Random House. By lunchtime, however, my vision
was clearing. I couldn’t help but notice the famous authors sitting in the
grand hotel lobby...grading papers.
Unfortunately,
being an author - even a “well-published” author, as I’ve been called - is no
guarantee of making a living from creative writing. In fact, if you are in it
for the money, stop now. Every time small publishers are swept into big
businesses, authors suffer. With every library loan, every deep discount, every
million-dollar celebrity tome, authors suffer. Why do some books soar while
others sink? Often it’s a mystery. There are easier ways.
What A Mother Knows is my sixth book. I have sold essays in popular anthologies, from Mommy Wars to the New York
Times Modern Love column. I’ve sold screenplays that were made into films
and some that never saw the light of day. I sold one novel right from the
outline and another after years of revision. I’ve had a book abandoned by an
editor who left the publisher, one orphaned by an agent who moved on, a
distributor that didn’t get the book out before my live CNN interview, and an illness
that prevented full participation in publicity tours. Rarely have I gone a full
year without supplementing my writing income.
There
are, however, many other ways to make money in the writing field. MFA programs
graduate more teachers than published authors. I moonlight as a writing
instructor and manuscript consultant. Both jobs are fun – and far easier than
writing.
And yet,
if money were the goal, I might have quit that day in New Orleans when I saw my
idols reading student work. But writing is more than a profession. It’s an art,
an avocation. I love to have a voice, to create something out of thin air, to
put a pin in the map of the world that says: I was here. And I love to play with
words, to create puzzles of action and emotions then translate the ideas in my
head into words I can share on the page. I love the process.
Perhaps
that’s why so many people self-publish now. Surely they would love to hit the
jackpot. But mostly, they want to be read. Many writers are in the business of
writing book series, building a constant stream of revenue with solid stories
and skilled marketing. Unfortunately, I’m not one of them. Every book I write
takes longer than the last. As my style gets more advanced, my stories get more
complex. I want each book to be my best.
So if you want to write, do it. If you have enough
passion to believe that your book will be a bestseller, then nothing will stop
you. All you can control is the words on the page. So make them sing. And keep
believing, just as I do...this time, I’ll hit the jackpot!
_____________________________________________________
Leslie Lehr's fabulous new novel is What A Mother Knows.
You can find it in bookstores, at airports, and on the Recommended Reading shelf at Target. Any day now it will be #1 on the bestseller list and made into a major motion picture bringing her fame, fortune, and a beach house in Malibu.
Inspring post!
ReplyDeleteI hear you, Leslie. And feel the same way. By the way, I think I told you that WHAT A MOTHER KNOWS was indeed a fabulous novel. I couldn't put it down. So that Malibu house is on the way!
ReplyDeleteThank you for reminding us of the reality that we rarely like to think about.
ReplyDeleteWhat a spectacularly inspired post, Leslie! Bravo!
ReplyDeleteThat is a wonderful post, Leslie! And true! Just the other day someone told me they heard I was an author, "that means you're a wealthy novelist," he said like it was true. I assured him it wasn't. He didn't believe me.
ReplyDeleteThat is a wonderful post, Leslie! And true! Just the other day someone told me they heard I was an author, "that means you're a wealthy novelist," he said like it was true. I assured him it wasn't. He didn't believe me.
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