When people who’ve known me for a while find out that I’ve published a book and am pursuing a career as a writer, one question usually comes up before long: When are you quitting your day job?

This question brings assumptions with it, whether or not the person asking it realizes as much. First, there’s an assumption that if I’ve published a book that’s in all the bookstores in the country and in libraries, continues to have good Amazon rankings, was reviewed in Publishers Weekly, is available as a limited edition, is being translated into three languages, etc. that I must be rolling in dough, so I’ll soon be upscaling my life. I think the idea that there’s huge wealth in publishing comes from an unwarranted extrapolation from the music industry or Hollywood, where a single modest success can set a person up for life.

The second assumption is that my day job is merely a support system for my writing. If that were true, if I was just putting in eight hours a day at a job I barely tolerated so I could write, I would be miserable. As it happens, I currently have two jobs. One I do during the daytime. I’ve been with the same company for over fifteen years. I love my “day job.” I’m good at what I do there, and it is fulfilling and rewarding. It’s not just something that pays the bills, buys printer paper and covers my family with health insurance. My second job, which I’ve been doing since 2000, is equally fulfilling and more flexible. It has to be, because I fit it in where I can, between day job, family life, chores, and many other things.

My normal response, when I really don’t want to get into a lengthy discussion of the finances of a writer (i.e. always) is this: “I know a lot of writers. I know a lot of writers with day jobs.” If I’m feeling particularly expansive, I say, “The number of writers able to support themselves comfortably solely by writing is fairly small.”

Here’s the reality. Suppose, just suppose, I wrote a killer novel, a publisher loved it and saw a decent market for it, and offered me a big advance. A huge advance. Hey, we’re making things up – let’s say the advance is a cool quarter million. $250,000 smakeroos. That, by the way, is astronomically higher than the average advance for a first novel. What would that mean for me?

Well, after my agent gets his 15% and Uncle Sam gets his share (let’s not even go there), I’d be lucky to come away with $150,000. And, of course, not all in one lump sum. Best case scenario, half now and half on publication. “Now,” of course, means that six to eight weeks after the publisher approves payment, a check will be sent to my agent. Sounds like a decent amount of money, but in the general timeframe of publishing I’d be unlikely to see both installments in one calendar year, so that really amounts to two years’ worth of income. I’d have to be hopelessly optimistic or foolish to give up a job where I have a fifteen-year history for something like that. Suppose I’m a one-hit wonder (or, worse, a one-flubber when the book doesn’t sell).

Even if I hit the big times and got a million bucks in advance, that really only represents (after commissions and taxes) a decade of good income. I’m 44 – I have at least twenty years ahead of me before I could even start to think about retiring from my day job. What happens when I’m 55 and blocked and there’s not much money coming in from the royalties any more, and…

Maybe I’m a bit of a pessimist or alarmist. I prefer to think of myself as a realist. I love to write. I like the income I make for my writing – I’ve stopped giving stuff away, for the most part (but that’s a topic for someone else, or for another time). In the best case scenario, I hit my stride, find my voice, find an audience and start producing commercially viable novels every year or two, and I reach the point where I could conceivably retire from the day job. Would I? Well, I’m realist enough to acknowledge that if I attained that level of success, I might have to give up the day job in order to meet a regular publishing deadline. My 90-minute session at 5:30 am before I get ready for the day job just might not cut it. It’s the kind of dilemma I wouldn’t mind facing some day.

In the interim, however, no, I have no plans to give up my day job. There are real people where I work. People I can interact with. A social group, a friendly bunch. And I enjoy what I do. It doesn’t get in the way of my writing – I’ve found a way to make these two avocations co-exist. I would miss it if I had to give it up.

It’s not my general aspiration to write myself out of a day job. It’s my aspiration to write, try to get published, improve my craft and have a blast with everything life tosses my way.

Bev Vincent
http://www.bevvincent.com

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This entry was posted on Friday, June 17th, 2005 at 9:08 am.
Categories: Uncategorized.

12 Comments, Comment or Ping

  1. David Niall Wilson

    Who are you kidding Bev? You did it to meet Stephen King (heh).

    You are one of the only people I know who can answer yes to the most commonly asked question for any horror author…

    D

  2. Bev Vincent

    The funny thing — I met Stephen King for the first time many years before I started writing seriously!

  3. Douglas Clegg

    Bev -

    Great post - makes me want a day job!

  4. Gary

    What a wonderful, enviable philosophy you have, Bev.

  5. James Goodman

    “The number of writers able to support themselves comfortably solely by writing is fairly small.”

    I have often heard this referred to as hitting the literary lottery.

    Great post, BTW

  6. Bev Vincent

    Yeah — hitting the literary lottery is about the size of it. The odds are possibly a little better, though, since it’s not entirely luck, but a big part of it is.

  7. DNW

    I thought I’d come back because I thought about this some today. You might modify what you have stated to not being able to make a living writing genre fiction…I know tons of people who write full time. There are a number on our list of 30…but most of those I know doing well either write TV, FILM, non-fiction, or a wide variety of things…it’s not hard to write for a living, but for me, it’s hard to write the kinds of things I’d have to write to DO that…that’s why I love MY day job…

    DNW

  8. Paul Dracon

    Thanks for that commentary, Bev. Very interesting.

  9. Steve Vernon

    It’s a good way to look at it.

    Very early in my writing I had a dream about self sufficiency, based on the production of Harlequin romances. I figured I could write 3-4 of those suckers for a year, and live off the proceeds. Only problem was, I sucked at writing those suckers.

    In any case, how long before writing became a day job that I dreaded?

    Still, I do entertain this fantasy of being able to trim my five days a week dayjob down into a two to three days a week task, eventually.

    I live in hope…

  10. Bev Vincent

    I went to the MWA Southwest conference on Saturday. First person I recognized was Michael Bracken, who has taken a couple of my stories for his anthologies. First question he asked me (I swear this is true): So, do you still have your day job?

  11. Mark Leslie

    Interesting commentary, Bev. Of course, it’s the 3 hour daily commute via train to my day job that gives me some uninterrupted writing and editing time (thank God for the laptop provided by the day job)

  12. Michael Bracken

    Gee, Bev, I need to come up with better opening lines…

    But wasn’t my second question better: “What IS your day job?”

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