Do you (writers) mostly have day jobs? E.g. A steady paycheck to help pay the bills?
If so, what's yours?
My understanding is that most writers (tie-in or not) don't earn big bucks, and the paychecks can be pretty irregular (must make budgeting hard).
Well, they might get famous...........If someone wants to get into this gig because they want to be rich and famous, they're in for a shock...
"Adult" in what sense of the word (dare I ask)?men's adult westerns
"Adult" in what sense of the word (dare I ask)?
I remember stumbling upon a sex scene in a Trek novel as a (late-)teen and giving me pause. It wasn't graphic or anything, and think it was in New Frontier where there was a lot of sex and nudity, but it felt like a rite of passage at the time. Made me think of Star Trek in more "adult" terms for the the first time.Stumbling onto "adult" sex scenes by accident used to be rite of passage for precocious young readers, or at least it was before the internet.![]()
have also written copious amounts of cover and jacket copy for other people's books, which is something I've been doing since 1987 or so -- when I used to get paid $80 a book to write the cover copy for men's adult westerns. ("Slocum rode shotgun on the road to trouble!")
Then again, another random search turned up a picture that, in turn, led me to the discovery that German jazz Hammond-player Barbara Dennerlein had branched out from jazz on tonewheels to jazz on real pipes. (And I highly recommend her "real pipes" recordings, particularly Spiritual Movement No. 1 and Spiritual Movement No. 2.) So random searches certainly aren't all bad.
And, authors, thank you very much. I love learning about others’ lines of work! I think this is my favorite thread. Unless someone bumps a tunic color one.
Don't be too pleased: I'm the one who first coined the phrase, "Laurens Hammond's Noisome Little Noisemaker™"(And you seem to know a Hammond is a Hammond, and not an organ, too!)
I have another question for the pro writers here: how do you feel about that old writing adage: “show, don’t tell”?
Good advice or an overused platitude?
I have another question for the pro writers here: how do you feel about that old writing adage: “show, don’t tell”?
Good advice or an overused platitude?
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