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Michael Card Interview Chosen as Best of 2009
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Michael Card Interview Chosen as Best of 2009
Papa Poet, what is sleep?
Susan, we would never let you be a fly on the wall. You'd be in the thick of it.
Mary, I'll mention your name next time I run into them.
spaghettipie, I'm in the espressocart RIGHT NOW, waiting for her to open up and give us some coffee. Er, sell us some coffee, at least. There's no such thing as free coffee.
Or maybe that's free lunch?
If your first novel sells 5,000 copies or less it will be VERY difficult to get that next project sold to a new publisher unless the writing and idea are absolutely fabulous.
Also. At some publishers, selling 15,000 is considered a failure. At other houses that is like hitting the game winning home run. So it all depends on the publisher and their expectations.
But this is all a theoretical discussion anyway and writers need to be careful when telling this info without the full story behind the anecdote. Numbers are a guideline, not a hard and fast rule. Marcus was wise to add the caveat above.
It was great meeting you!
Hope that helps!
As a Christian, I have to constantly check my definitions of success. First of all, love God through my work. Then, love my neighbors through my work. The real grace is God's love, not book sales. It's funny how hard is to remember that sometimes.
I know I'm coming into this conversation late, but did you ever find out how blogging was bad for someone's writing? I have a few guesses. One, the person wasn't getting her writing assignments finished on time. Two, the style of writing on her blog was different than her professional writing. Three, this one is tough, she was talking about things on her blog that were supposed to be confidential.
Unfortunately, I probably just painted you into a corner. You might not be able to discuss this situation on your blog, since it's a touchy subject.
But it could be good topic to discuss in an open forum, no pointing fingers sort of way.
Thanks for giving such a thorough over-view of the conference.
:)
It's one of the big dangers of blogging. The instant feedback can be a real temptation.
In fact, I've thought of pulling out of blogging completely for just that reason. It can be very hard to set boundaries. And yet.... it really is one of the keys to the future of publishing I think. We just don't know what it is going to unlock yet.