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Café Life is the Colony's main hangout, watering hole and meeting point.
This is a place where you'll meet and make writing friends, and indulge in stratospherically-elevated wit or barometrically low humour.
Some Colonists pop in religiously every day before or after work. Others we see here less regularly, but all are equally welcome. Two important grounds rules…
We now allow political discussion, but strongly suggest it takes place in the Steam Room, which is a private sub-forum within Café Life. It’s only accessible to Full Members.
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It pretty much echoes what Pete has said. If you are a middle lister, ie not someone who stirs up big auctions, you are going to have to promote the same as if you self-published.
I've never been asked for money. There's no way I'd agree to any publishing contract that stipulates I have to pay the publisher to publish my work.Nikky, did this really happen to you? Have you been asked for money by commercial publishers?
Interesting. I sell at my local sff convention (basically NZ's version of ComicCon) and I've broken well over even both times (albeit I don't have to pay for accommodation as I only need to drive 20 mins from home to get there). I do wonder if part of it is because books are flipping expensive in NZ and because I'm not selling through a bookstore, I can sell copies slightly cheaper as I have no middleperson to account for. There was an interesting article about the recent Auckland Writers Festival and the bookshop that handled the stock at the festival had it's biggest year ever, and yet NZ bookshops are dropping like flies due to economic conditions. I'll see if I can find it again and reshare it here.I used to say that all I paid for was conferences, and the transportation and accommodations that brought me to them, and then I did the math and realized that it added up to three or four thousand dollars a year. If you're only there for one or two books, that's a pretty poor investment. What I don't see is how self-publishing would help. Nobody - not even celebrity authors - sell hundreds of copies at conferences I attend. It all has to be about books being part of some larger business.
I attend food writing events with a lot to sell; books, articles, and photography and sometimes I can make some good deals. Conferences can also be in places I like, but rarely visit like Denver or Charleston - so maybe worth it for that.
Very interesting. The recent Dublin festival I went to had a book stall and it was booming-even at full price. I think future innovations are going to make it easier for writers and readers to connect. Also my SF vision is a kindle that looks in every way like a book except the pages are a material that can erase the print. So you finish one book, erase it and download another one but you have an actual book to read instead of a screen.